Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
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Online Publication Date: 01 Dec 2018

Assessing the Vibration Fatigue Life of Engine Mounted Components

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Page Range: 20 – 30
DOI: 10.17764/1098-4321.61.1.20
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Abstract

As part of the design validation of components mounted on rotating machinery such as a car engine, it is essential to understand the environmental stress in which they operate. In the case of vibration loadings, the reliability must be verified according to accelerated tests that realistically reproduce the in-service stress. Indeed, a representative validation profile permits not only the assessment of the component durability, but also provides a reliable reference for design optimization (downsizing), reducing development cycle costs, and time scale. This paper proposes an innovative methodology to generate tailored vibration signals more representative of the real environment. First, the severity of the test is tailored to the specific engine usage profile, i.e., the time spent at each revolution per minute (RPM) for a given percentile of customer usage. Traditional signals of Power Spectrum Density (PSD) and sine sweep are developed according a fatigue damage approach (test tailoring). Then, a more representative vibration specification is obtained as a multiple-sine-on-random signal. The signal is expressed as a series of multiple sine sweeps (representing the engine harmonics) and a PSD (representing the random leftover signal). A case study applied to an engine mounted heat exchanger (a water-cooled intercooler) is presented. The generated specification is compared to the validation signals developed according to existing procedures. The results show that 1) the tailored approach decreases the risk of unnecessary over-testing and 2) the multi-swept-sine-on-random signal guarantees the best representativeness of the real environment.

Copyright: © 2018 2018

Contributor Notes

ABOUT THE AUTHORS

Marco Bonato has been a reliability design leader and expert at Valeo Thermal Systems since 2012. His responsibilities include the elaboration of new specifications, the design of reliability studies related to cooling components, and the development and implementation of customer-based engineering and reliability issues. Bonato holds a PhD in material science from the University of Bristol, UK, and a Master's degree in inorganic chemistry from the University of Padua, Italy.

Philippe Goge, a reliability and testing manager, joined Valeo in November 2005. Since 2013, Goge has been in charge of development and validation of reliability methodologies. He manages a team that provides services for all Valeo internal project teams. As a senior expert since January 2014, he has been involved in various customer warranty return crises and is an active trainer at Valeo THS Academy. He holds an engineering degree from ENSTA Bretagne, Ecole Nationale Supérieure de Techniques Avancées, France.

Contact author: Marco Bonato, marco.bonato@valeo.com, +33 1 30 13 51 97
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