Bearing with wear sensor
09951820 ยท 2018-04-24
Assignee
Inventors
- Graham Andrew Dowie (Epsom, NH, US)
- Brandyn Duane Lewis (Canterbury, NH, US)
- Richard R. Soelch (Sanbornton, NH, US)
Cpc classification
F16C9/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C2240/60
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C2233/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C17/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C17/246
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C7/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C23/045
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F16C41/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C17/24
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C7/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A bearing with a wear surface sensor configured to wirelessly transmit information comprising a bearing wear surface containing a wear surface sensor wherein the wear surface sensor includes one or more connecting wires for transmitting a data signal from the wear surface sensor indicative of the state of wear of the bearing wear surface. The one or more connecting wires extend outside of the bearing wear surface and are connected to a radio frequency communicator for transmitting a data signal from the sensor indicative of the state of wear of the bearing wear surface. The radio frequency communicator and the sensor are fixed relative to one another such that the connecting wires are not flexed to failure during bearing use.
Claims
1. A bearing with a sensor configured to wirelessly transmit information comprising: at least two sliding bearing surfaces; a bearing wear surface included on a first of said sliding bearing surfaces wherein said bearing wear surface is located between said first sliding bearing surface and a second of said sliding bearing surfaces and said second sliding bearing surface contacts said bearing wear surface, said bearing wear surface including a wear surface sensor wherein said wear surface sensor includes one or more connecting wires for transmitting a data signal from said wear surface sensor indicative of the state of wear of the bearing wear surface wherein said one or more connecting wires extend outside of said wear surface and are connected to a radio frequency communicator for transmitting a data signal from said sensor indicative of the state of wear of said bearing wear surface; wherein said radio frequency communicator and said sensor are fixed relative to one another such that said connecting wires are not flexed to failure.
2. The bearing sensor of claim 1 wherein said bearing wear surfaces comprise a first bearing wear layer and a second bearing wear layer and said bearing wear surface sensor is positioned below said first wear layer and above said second wear layer.
3. The bearing sensor of claim 2 wherein said first bearing wear layer has a thickness that is greater than said second bearing wear surface layer.
4. The bearing sensor of claim 2 wherein said first bearing wear layer has a thickness of 0.002 to 0.020.
5. The bearing sensor of claim 2 wherein said second bearing wear layer has a thickness of 0.001 to 0.10.
6. The bearing with a sensor of claim 1 wherein the bearing is a journal bearing, a spherical bearing, a sliding bearing, or a track roller.
7. The bearing of claim 1 wherein said radio frequency communicator is an active RIFD tag with its own power source.
8. The bearing of claim 1 wherein said radio frequency communicator is a passive RFID tag without its own power source.
9. The bearing of claim 1 wherein said bearing wear surface comprises a thermoplastic or thermoset resin.
10. The bearing of claim 1 wherein said bearing is positioned on a rod end that is capable of adjusting its length.
11. The bearing of claim 1, wherein said second sliding bearing surface is a ball.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention will be described by way of example and with reference to the drawing in which:
(2)
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(11)
(12) It should be noted that the wear sensor contained within the bearing wear surface and said radio frequency communicator 12 are fixed relative to one another, to ensure that connecting wires 13 do not flex to failure when the bearing is in use. That is, by fixing the wear sensor relative to the radio frequency communicator 12, during bearing use, the connecting wires do not undergo any significant strain which may therefore lead to a break in communication as between the wear sensor and the radio frequency communicator 12. Accordingly, reference to the feature that the wear sensor and the radio frequency communicator as being fixed should be understood herein as that situation where the connecting wires are not flexed to the point of failure during the given lifetime of the bearing and remain relatively intact at least to that point in bearing use whereby the wear sensor has reported that the bearing wear surface 15 is in need of replacement.
(13) It should be noted that preferably, radio frequency communicator 12 is an RFID tag in communication with the wear sensor. The RFID tag 12 can be either active (powered, capable of transmitting with or without receiving a signal from a remote reading device) or passive (unpowered, relies on receiving a signal and energy from a remote reading device). Although exceptions due occur, the active tags are generally preferred in applications requiring higher functionality, greater transmission range or a stronger signal. The passive tags are generally more suitable for identification purposes and close range monitoring.
(14) It is also contemplated herein that the wear sensor circuit 13a may be a printed circuit that is prepared by additive manufacturing or a photo-etched circuit that is formed by subtractive manufacturing.
(15)
(16) It can therefore now be appreciated that the thickness of 15R and 15W can be altered to shift the ratio of normal wear life to reserve wear life, as desired. The ball 11c, in sliding contact with 15W, gradually wears away 15W. The wear sensor 13a generates a signal when the ball wears through wear sensor 13a. This signal is processed by the external wires or preferably RFID tag portion and communicated to the remote radio frequency reading device 14 which may be achieved according to the RFID Tag communications design protocol. The radio frequency reading device notifies the operator the bearing has entered its' reserve life capacity and maintenance should be scheduled.
(17) It should be noted therefore that layer 15W may preferably be of a thickness of 0.002 to 0.020 thick, including all values and increments therein in 0.001 variation. For example, layer 15W may preferably have a thickness in the range of 0.009-0.012. Layer 15R may have a thickness in the range of 0.001 to 0.10, including all values and increments therein in 0.001 variation. For example, layer 15R may preferably have a thickness in the range of 0.002 to 0.006. Wear sensor 13a may preferably itself have a thickness in the range of 0.001 to 0.010 including all values and increments therein in 0.001 variation. For example, wear sensor 13a may have a thickness of 0.002 to 0.004. Furthermore, the length and width of the wear sensor may vary depending upon the particular bearing at issue. Preferably, the length and width of the sensor is such that it will be present at 5-100% of the entire wear surface area of the bearing wear surface to be monitored
(18) Wear surface layers 15R or 15W may preferably be selected from various thermoplastic or thermoset compositions. Preferably, wear surface layers are formed from phenolic based resins, which is reference to those resins that include polymers formed by polymerization of phenolic type compounds. The wear surface layers may also preferably include resins of polyimides and polyacrylates, poly(vinyl formal) resins, polyesteracrylates, poly(amide imides), epoxy, polyetherketones, polyetherether ketones, polyphenylene oxide, polycarbonate, polyphenylene sulfide, polyoxymethylene, polybenzimidazoles, polyethylene, polypropylene and polyurethane acrylates. The polymer resins are therefore preferably present at 20%-100% by weight. The resins may optionally contain 0.1%-80% by weight of fibrous reinforcement which may include woven fabrics or non-woven fabrics formed from aromatic polyamides, polyesters, polyamides, glass and carbon fibers. In addition the polymer resins for the wear surface layers may include 0.1-60% by weight of one or more lubricants selected from polytetrafluoroethylene powder, molybdenum disulfide, hexagonal boron nitride, graphite or perfluropolyethers. Furthermore, wear surface layers 15R and 15W may be the same or have different compositions.
(19) As can be appreciated, in this situation, once the wear sensor 13a informs that wear surface layer 15W has been consumed, were surface layer 15R which may be relatively thinner than wear surface layer 15W, can provide relatively better wear characteristics such that the time for bearing maintenance is assured. For example, for a bearing used in an aviation application, an indication that wear surface layer has been consumed during flight will not necessarily require an immediate grounding of the aircraft.
(20) The opposing, non-polymeric sliding wear surface layer 11c as illustrated in
(21) It should be noted that the sensor 13a may optionally provide for other types of information. This may include, but is not limited to, temperature, force, acceleration, or cycles all of which may be communicated with the radio frequency reading device according to a communications design protocol. This information along with a use time record may then constitute a Condition Based Maintenance (CBM) record for the subject bearing within its particular application.
(22) The bearing 11 can be a journal, spherical, rod end, linkage, track roller, flat surface or any shape bearing surface integral to a machine component. The bearing can be metal, composite, polymeric, or ceramic or may be any combination of these. The bearing can also be either an isolated bearing built into housing, a structure, or a discrete component or it may be in a novel link or rod end of the invention.
(23) The wear surface layers 15W or 15R can be adhered to either sliding surface. Typically it is often on the race for spherical and journal bearings and on the roller for track roller bearings although it can be reversed in any case. It is often advantageous to roughen the surface of 11a before combining with the base layer 15R. In some cases it is also advantageous to coat an additional, thin adhesive layer onto 11a before combining with 15R. Such adhesive may be present at a thickness of 0.0001 to 0.0020, more preferably at a thickness of 0.0002 to 0.002.
(24) The polymer wear surface layer can be formed before adhering it to the bearing surface by any polymer sheet, film or composite processing method or combinations of methods. The polymer wear surface layer can be constructed stepwise onto the bearing surface by any polymer, composite, or combinations of these manufacturing processes. The polymer wear surface layer can be partially formed before adhering it to the wear surface layer and then completed after adhering it to the wear surface layer.
(25) In a preferred method conventional processing means are combined as follows: a layer of adhesive resin is coated onto the controlled roughness (Ra) bearing substrate surface (represented as 11a in
(26) The functional circuit 13a can be one or more circuits. The functional circuitry can be formed by any method that results in the layered structure shown in
(27) A preferred wear sensor circuit 13a is a printed circuit.
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(31) Linkage 25 also has a second external wear layer RFID mounted portion on the rod end body, while 27 has a second external wear layer RFID mounted portion on the rod end shank. Linkage 26 is an example where only one bearing on the linkage contains the wear sensor of the present invention.
(32) In certain cases a length adjustable linkage could be comprised of two wear sensor circuits that are wired to one radio frequency communicator. Again, the wear sensor circuits would be preferably disposed within the polymeric wear surfaces and include wires extending outside such wear surfaces and connecting to the radio frequency communicator, where the two sets of wires are again fixed relative to the radio frequency communicator and the wires are not flexed to failure during bearing use. Linkages 28, 29, 30, 31 are fixed length adjustable bearing each containing one or more wear sensors with various mounting possibilities for the external radio frequency communicator.
(33)
(34) Bracket clamp 35 is a non-limiting example of a retention or stabilization clamp used to secure bracket 34 to link or linkage assembly 36 after adjustment of length. Bracket clamp 35 may restrain bracket 34 directly to the tube or provide close proximity alignment with no contact.
(35) As noted above, the bearing including the wear sensor 13a can be preferably operated to provide information such as but not limited to one or more of the following: identity of the bearing; location of the bearing (in cases with multiple bearings performing a similar function such as but not limited to helicopter pitch rotor bearings); functional status of the RFID Bearing sensor system; indicator when the bearing wear life reserve has started; bearing wear layer temperature record; bearing load cycle count; bearing wear layer force record, and bearing wear layer acceleration data; external bearing wear layer environmental temperature and acceleration.
(36) The bearing containing the wear sensor contained with the bearing wear surfaces herein, along with the use of such wear sensor configuration one length adjustable bearings and rod ends are contemplated to be specifically useful in the field of sliding bearings including but not limited to aerospace bearings, railroad bearings, vehicles suspension systems, and power generation systems such as wind turbines and the like.
(37) It is worth noting that the initial attempt to develop a bearing wear surface indicator herein was made by embedding a wear sensor circuit with radio frequency communicator completely within the wear surface layer. These attempts failed to produce a reliable, detectable signal outside of the bearing. While not being bound by any particular theory, it is believed that the metallic surfaces of the bearing itself may have caused debilitating interference with radio frequency exchange between the tag and the receiver.
(38) Accordingly, the configuration herein, including placement of the wear sensor circuitry within the bearing wear surfaces, along with wire communication outside of the wear surface and to a radio frequency communicator, where the wear sensor circuitry is fixed relative to the radio frequency communicator, such that the wires are not flexed to failure during bearing use, allowed for reliable detection of bearing wear surface lifetime.
EXAMPLE 1
(39) A test was conducted using the following components: (a) Alien Technology Higgs 4 inlay EPC Gen2 passive RFID tags (b) Motorola MC9090 Z handheld RFID tag reader (c) Plain bearings per AS81934/1 specification, dimensionally conforming to P/N M81934/1-16C016
(40) Test Methods and Findings: (a) Tags were confirmed to function outside of the wear interface. (b) Tags were confirmed to function after the liner manufacturing process. (c) Tags were placed in many orientations, partially and completely within the wear interface of the bearing. (d) Tags were found to function poorly when in close proximity to metals, especially when metal surfaces obstructed the path between the RFID tag and reader as necessitated by being within the liner. (e) Tags were found to function poorly when adhered to metal surfaces. (f) Tags completely within the wear surface layer were unreadable.
EXAMPLE 2
(41) A test procedure was developed to validate the reliable performance of the wear sensor system. This test allowed for rapid iteration until key technical challenges were overcome and the system was ready for conventional bearing life testing. This test was confirmed to provide sufficiently representative wear when compared to established oscillation test procedures.
(42) Components used in Test: (a) XBee ZigBee 2.4 GHz wireless transceivers (b) Bridgeport type milling machine with abrasive cylinder hone (c) Plain bearings per AS81934/1 specification, dimensionally conforming to P/N M81934/1-16C016 with sensor embedded wear surface layer in accordance with present invention
(43) Test Methods: (a) XBee transmitter configured to broadcast state of digital input connected to wear sensor. (b) XBee receiver configured to indicate state of transmitter digital input and strength of received signal. (c) Abrasive cylinder hone used to accelerate wear of the bearing liner, simulating bearing functional surface wear.
(44) Findings: (a) Active transmitter was confirmed to function in close proximity to metal components. (b) Liner wear reaching limit was reliably detected. (c) Wear was deemed sufficiently characteristic of application to warrant further development.
EXAMPLE 3
(45) A test was conducted, on a test machine, of the following bearings: (a) Journal bearings in accordance with the present invention, dimensionally conforming to Specification AS81934/1 part number M81934/1-16C016 having a ceramic coated pin as the rotating wear member. Pin surface finish 10-14 Ra.
(46) Test Conditions:
(47) Bearing stress: 25,000 psi
(48) Loading: Unidirectional
(49) Oscillation: 25 rotation, 100 total per cycle
(50) Frequency: 0.5 Hz
(51) Duration: 0.014-0.020 wear
(52) Testing suspended prior to reaching metal to metal surface contact between the pin and journal bearings. As shown in