Authors Abstract
Content
Powder metallurgy is a widely used manufacturing methodology in the gearbox industry. Noise and vibration is a common cause for concern in the gearbox industry due to the continuous contact between gear teeth at high rotational frequencies. Despite this, limited research has been performed investigating the modal properties of powder metal products. This work investigates the damping ratios of a copper-infiltrated steel powder metal ring and a hot-rolled steel ring both experimentally and computationally. Negligible difference was observed between the damping ratios of the powder metal and hot-rolled steel rings. Two proportional damping models were investigated to predict the damping ratios of the powder metal ring. It was found that the Caughey damping model was the most accurate, generating damping ratios within 2.36% for a frequency bandwidth of up to 4000 Hz. These findings allow researchers and engineers to accurately model the damping properties of powder metal products to optimize the powder metal manufacturing process to minimize noise and vibration.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/10-04-03-0017
Pages
13
Citation
Warwick, B., Kim, I., and Mechefske, C., "Damping of Powder Metal Rings," SAE Int. J. Veh. Dyn., Stab., and NVH 4(3):249-258, 2020, https://doi.org/10.4271/10-04-03-0017.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
May 21, 2020
Product Code
10-04-03-0017
Content Type
Journal Article
Language
English