Applied Sciences (Jan 2021)
CFD-Based Investigation on Effects of Orifice Length–Diameter Ratio for the Design of Hydrostatic Thrust Bearings
Abstract
Orifice-restricted hydrostatic thrust bearings are broadly employed in ultra-precision machine tools, aerospace industries, and so forth. The orifice length–diameter ratio (OLDR) is one of the significant geometrical parameters of the orifice-restricted hydrostatic thrust bearing, which directly affects the performance of the bearing. To accurately guide the design of the hydrostatic thrust bearing, the effect of the OLDR on the performance of the hydrostatic thrust bearing needs to be thoroughly and scientifically investigated, especially for ultra-precision machine tools. In this paper, the influences of various OLDRs are comprehensively studied using the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) approach on the pressure pattern, velocity, turbulent intensity, and vortices, as well as the load capacity, stiffness, volume flow rate, and orifice flow resistance of the hydrostatic thrust bearing under identical operating conditions. The obtained results show that there are differences in performance behaviors of the hydrostatic thrust bearing caused by different OLDRs. Some new findings are obtained, particularly in the second-order small vortices which appear in the annular recesses with all OLDRs except that of 2, and the flow resistance does not always increase with increasing OLDRs. Finally, the proposed CFD approach is experimentally validated.
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