Study of Break-In Process and its Effects on Piston Skirt Lubrication in Internal Combustion Engines

The piston skirt is one of the main contributors to the total mechanical loss in internal combustion engines. Usually, the skirt friction experiences a rapid change during the break-in period largely due to the wear of the machine marks or roughness against soft coatings. It is thus important to con...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Meng, Zhen, Zhang, Linfeng, Tian, Tian
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering
Format: Article
Published: MDPI AG 2020
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/124976
Description
Summary:The piston skirt is one of the main contributors to the total mechanical loss in internal combustion engines. Usually, the skirt friction experiences a rapid change during the break-in period largely due to the wear of the machine marks or roughness against soft coatings. It is thus important to consider the effect of the change of the roughness for a realistic prediction of the piston skirt friction and system optimization. In this work, an existing model of piston skirt lubrication was improved with the consideration of a breaking in process for the most commonly used triangle machine marks. A new set of flow factors in the averaged Reynolds equation were analytically derived for the trapezoid shape formed after wear of the original triangle shape. A new asperity contact model was developed for the trapezoid shape. The calculation results reflect the trend of friction mean effective pressure (FMEP) during break-in in an engine test and showed quantitative agreement under the same amount of wear.