Producing gear teeth with high form accuracy and fine surface finish using water-lubricated chemical reactions

2005 
Abstract A new method was investigated for high-accuracy fine finishing of gear teeth surfaces using a water-lubricated tribo-chemical technique. A pair of shaved gears with rather low surface roughness was rotated in water lubricant for 30 min so that the gear tooth surface contacting the mating tooth was ‘worn’ to a mirror surface and ideal tooth profile, due to the mechano-chemical mild erosion of the contact area. The wear rate was 2.0 μm per 20,000 meshings, corresponding to a wear of one atomic radius thickness per meshing. Oxidation of the steel surface by water molecules is proposed as the dominant wear process. Operation noise from the gear pair rotation was drastically reduced to lower than about 10–15 dB compared to conventionally machined gear surfaces (30 dB in average), as a result of the wear of the tooth surface to form a best-fit profile. The noise increased with further processing of the gear pair. Thus, there is an appropriate number of rotations for suitable surface wear treatment. This new and simple procedure for surface treatment assures saving in energy, and does not require expensive honing techniques or high-accuracy grinding tools. The wear mechanisms used in this process are discussed along with the application of the technique to other processes for precision finishing.
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