Author_Institution :
Dept. of Mech. Eng., Texas Univ., Austin, TX, USA
Abstract :
A hypothetical mechanism to explain wear associated with thermal mounding in carbon graphite electrical brushes is introduced. Contact between a brush thermal mound and a sliding/conducting rotor initiates a thermal cycle in which extreme temperatures inside the mound alter material property values and intensify stresses. Temperatures and stresses evolve until mound failure occurs, probably near the edge of the contact zone between the thermal mound and rotor. The mound detaches from the brushface, and with the mechanical support provided by the mound removed, the entire brush body tilts, until contact is reestablished with some other elevated portion of the brushface. A new thermal mound is born, and the thermal cycle begins. Using the particle ejection mechanism as a basis, wear rates, hot spot speeds, and thermal mound lifetimes are calculated, related, and compared to experimentally obtained values. This mechanism may account for moving hot spots, widely varying wear rates, environmental effects, and vastly different performance characteristics in electrical brushes
Keywords :
brushes; failure analysis; machine testing; rotors; wear testing; brush body; brushwear; contact zone; environmental effects; hot spot speeds; mechanical support; mound failure; particle ejection mechanism; performance characteristics; sliding/conducting rotor; thermal cycle; thermal mounding; wear rates; Brushes; Conducting materials; Contacts; Heating; Material properties; Mechanical engineering; Temperature; Thermal conductivity; Thermal expansion; Thermal stresses;