By Arthur Jones and Aliesha Pocratsky
They could if they are made from powder
metal (PM). Engineers have relied on bearings and bushings made
from PM for over 80 years, and recent advances have made PM parts
even more attractive. Reliable test data, quality control, and specifications
can help designers select and apply these versatile parts.
Picking PM
Designers considering PM bearings for a specific application
should look at the required operating temperatures, K-value, oil
content, and pressure-velocity (PV) ratio. These four properties are
essential pieces of information for engineers who predict how bearings
will operate in the real world. At the design phase, the engineer
is relying on the strength and oil capacity of the bearing to meet, if
not exceed, the design requirements.
Any bearing selection process should first evaluate the maximum
pressure (P) in psi exerted on the bearing and the maximum
velocity (V) of the shaft in surface feet/minute (sfpm). The relationship
between P and V is given as a combined numeric metric in rpm
psi, the PV ratio. PM bronze bearings are a good choice when the
PV ratio reaches but does not exceed 50,000.
Another metric to consider is the K-value, the radial crush force
that can break or flatten a bearing. The Metal Powder Industries Federation (MPIF), an industrial
association responsible
for powder-metalbearing
standards across the industry, requires that selflubricating
sintered-bronze bearings have a K-value of at
least 26,000 psi of force.
Engineers should also consider the bearing’s operating
temperature while in-field. While the bearing material
itself can withstand high temperatures, actual bearing
performance depends on the temperature range of
the lubricant.
In normal operations, bearings can heat up to about
120°F without any performance loss. However, synthetic
oils can boost performance if the bearing must operate in
harsher settings where the ambient temperature is below
30°F or above 200°F. Adding substances like graphite to
the lubricants can further extend performance.
Oil content measures the amount of oil stored in the
bearing’s interconnected pores as a percent of the part’s
total mass. PM bearing manufacturers strive to create
parts that have both high K-value and many capillarylike
interconnected pores that let the bearing store the maximum
amount of oil. Most oil-impregnated bronze PM bearings have an oil content
of 19 to 20%.
Quality commitment
The quality of a bearing
depends on the raw materials
from which it is manufactured and the manufacturing
process itself. (See sidebar for details on the PM process.)
Designers should choose PM bearings made from
high-quality precursors. The bearing supplier should test
incoming powders’ particle size, chemical composition,
and other quality markers. Long-term relationships with
trusted suppliers provide an extra level of certainty about
raw material quality.
The manufacturer should also be committed to continuous
maintenance and, if needed, replacement of tooling
to ensure consistent products. An on-site machine
shop can help ensure quick tool turnaround and tooling
quality.
Designers should monitor in-process quality continuously.
The technicians setting up the presses and monitoring
control parameters should be skilled, experienced, and
knowledgeable.
Frequent testing of metrics such as K-value, oil content,
and density can catch quality problems early. Symmco, for
example, tests randomly selected bearings for these properties.
Test results are compared both to MPIF standards
and to process history to permit continuous improvement.
Symmco’s technical team studies how molding, sintering,
sizing, and oiling processes affect ultimate bearing
performance.
Having a machine on-site that can test bearings under
load lets Symmco simulate the demands on the bearing
during operation and ensure bearing quality. Ongoing
tests also look into how the type of oil impregnated into
the bearing affects the steady-state temperature.
Feature flexibility
The near-net-shape process these metrics monitor is
the driver behind the lower cost of PM bearings. Pressing
the parts into a custom mold results in inside-diameter
and outside-diameter tolerances between 0.001 to 0.002 in., so depending on the application, a finishing step
may not be needed. Designers may also have the option
of molding in additional features such as keyways or windows instead of machining them with a
secondary process.
The self-lubricating properties of oilimpregnated
PM bearings also provide
design flexibility. As the temperature of
the bearing rises in service, the oil releases,
creating a cushion between the
shaft and the bearing surfaces. When rotation
of the shaft or bearing stops and
the bearing cools, it again absorbs the oil
that was released onto the shaft, although
reabsorbtion never reaches 100%.
Self-lubrication means it may not be
necessary to machine oil grooves into
the faces of the parts. The bearings can
also self-lubricate in high-load uses that
tend to squeeze out applied lubricants.
The resulting low coefficient of friction
saves energy and lowers torque drive requirements.
Self-lubrication ultimately brings less downtime and longer
life.
POWDER PROCESS
In a powder-metal (PM) part, powdered elemental
metals or alloys combine with lubricants to
produce a homogeneous mix. A mixture of copper
and tin powders makes a bronze part.
A die is filled with the mixture and then sees pressures
from 10 to 45 tons/in.2 to produce a powdermetal
briquette that is 105 to 110% of the final part
size.
Next, the briquette heats up in an inert atmosphere
to a high temperature (1,500°F for bronze) for sintering.
The sintering temperature is below the melting
point of the metal but is still sufficient to fuse the individual
metal particles into a strong network of interconnected
grains surrounding pores.
After sintering, the part is again compressed to the
desired size and physical properties.
A second heating in a protective atmosphere,
followed by an oil quench improves hardness and
strength. A lubricant appropriate to the application
can be impregnated into the part’s pores which act
like an oil sponge. Designers can specify food-grade,
medical-grade, military-spec, and other lubricants depending
on the application. |