High pressure lubricant property measurements
(2005) 2005 World Tribology Congress III p.461-462- Abstract
- Using a high pressure chamber, different types of lubricants have been studied at pressures representative of elastohydrodynamically lubricated contacts. The three types of lubricants (solid, liquid and gaseous) have been compressed and sheared to measure the compression, the shear stress as a function of pressure and shear velocity, and the solidification pressure. In the high pressure chamber refrigeration gases have been compressed into solid state, lubrication oils have been compressed 35% by volume, and solid waxes have been compressed 44% by volume. Copyright
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/615754
- author
- Jacobson, Bo LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2005
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- High pressure chamber
- host publication
- Proceedings of the World Tribology Congress III - 2005
- pages
- 461 - 462
- publisher
- American Society Of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
- conference name
- 2005 World Tribology Congress III
- conference location
- Washington, D.C., United States
- conference dates
- 2005-09-12 - 2005-09-16
- ISBN
- 0791842010
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- b868d256-fa4d-4f07-b755-6eeead83f03b (old id 615754)
- alternative location
- http://store.asme.org/product.asp?catalog%5Fname=Conference+Papers&category%5Fname=Lubrication+and+Lubricants%5FWTC2005&product%5Fid=WTC2005%2D63329&cookie%5Ftest=1
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 10:49:32
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 21:00:59
@inproceedings{b868d256-fa4d-4f07-b755-6eeead83f03b, abstract = {{Using a high pressure chamber, different types of lubricants have been studied at pressures representative of elastohydrodynamically lubricated contacts. The three types of lubricants (solid, liquid and gaseous) have been compressed and sheared to measure the compression, the shear stress as a function of pressure and shear velocity, and the solidification pressure. In the high pressure chamber refrigeration gases have been compressed into solid state, lubrication oils have been compressed 35% by volume, and solid waxes have been compressed 44% by volume. Copyright}}, author = {{Jacobson, Bo}}, booktitle = {{Proceedings of the World Tribology Congress III - 2005}}, isbn = {{0791842010}}, keywords = {{High pressure chamber}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{461--462}}, publisher = {{American Society Of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)}}, title = {{High pressure lubricant property measurements}}, url = {{http://store.asme.org/product.asp?catalog%5Fname=Conference+Papers&category%5Fname=Lubrication+and+Lubricants%5FWTC2005&product%5Fid=WTC2005%2D63329&cookie%5Ftest=1}}, year = {{2005}}, }