Effects of Grooved Surfaces and Lubrication Media on the Performance of Hybrid Gas Journal Bearings
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Date
2025
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Abstract
Gas bearings are attractive for sustainable, high-speed, and cryogenic applications, where gases replace liquid lubricants. This study numerically analyzed hybrid gas journal bearings lubricated with hydrogen, nitrogen, air, and helium, and quantifies the impact of circumferential micro-grooves. The compressible Reynolds equation was solved by the finite element method with constant-flow valve restrictors, while Gauss–Seidel iterations were used for convergence. The model was verified against published theoretical and experimental data with maximum deviations below 6%, and mesh independence is confirmed. The parametric results show that the gas type and texturing jointly controlled static and dynamic performance. Helium (highest viscosity) yielded the largest minimum film thickness, whereas hydrogen (lowest viscosity) attained higher peak pressures at a lower film thickness for a given load. Grooves redistributed pressure and reduced both the maximum pressure and the minimum film thickness, but they also lowered the frictional torque. Quantitatively, the hydrogen-lubricated grooved bearing reduced the frictional torque by up to 50% compared with the non-grooved air-lubricated bearing at the same load. Relative to air, hydrogen increased stiffness and damping by up to 10% and 50%, respectively, and raised the stability threshold speed by 110%. Conversely, grooves decreased the stiffness, damping, and stability threshold speed compared with non-grooved surfaces, revealing a trade-off between friction reduction and dynamic stability. These findings provide design guidance for selecting gas media and surface texturing to tailor hybrid gas journal bearings to application-specific requirements.
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Keywords
FEM, Surface texturing, Hybrid journal bearing, Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Air, Helium
