Dynamic Behavior of Planetary Gears
<p style="text-align: center;"><img title="1594355818105617.png" alt="7.png" src="/ueditor/php/upload/image/20200710/1594355818105617.png"/></p><p></p><p>Besides power density, reliability and
efficiency, noise is always an important
criterion for a successful gear design. In
many theoretical and experimental investigations and papers, the influences
and potential remedies were discussed.
For example, in (Ref.6) the importance
of a large overlap ratio, achieved by a
large helix angle is described as the
most important factor for reducing gear
noise. In planetary gear systems of high
power density and high gear ratio, helical gears create undesirable tilting moments on the planet gears; therefore,
spur gears are still preferred for planetary gears¡ªa special challenge with
respect to noise. Specifically, the different behavior of planetary gears with
sequential and symmetric gear mesh is
explained in this paper.
As described (Ref.10), the variable
mesh stiffness along the path of contact in the tooth contact leads to oscillating forces on the shafts and bearings,
which are transmitted to the casing.
The casing vibrations radiate airborne
noise (Fig.1).
The influence of tooth geometry on
the excitation behavior is determined
by the geometry parameters, such as
profile and overlap ratios, flank modifications and manufacturing deviations.
For design to low noise emission, the
knowledge of the elastic and dynamic
behavior of the transmission system
and the excitation mechanisms of the
gear mesh is required. Parameters
which are useful to evaluate the dynamic behavior of a gear mesh are described in this paper.
The findings of (Ref.10) are summarized in this paper, further developed
and, for sequential gear mesh, applied
to a practical example with test stand
measurements. Hereby, the theory is further sustained on how several variables impact gear noise in parallel shaft
and planetary gear trains.</p><p><br/></p><p>Gear Mesh Excitation</p><p>For a cylindrical, involute gear mesh,
the main parameters of excitation are:
? Time-varying tooth stiffness
? Deflection of the teeth
? Deviations in tooth geometry
? Deflection of shafts, bearings and
casing
? Premature tooth contact under load
Tooth deflection and mesh stiffness.
Single tooth mesh stiffness consists of
three components as depicted in
Figure 2:
? Tooth deflection due to bending
under load
? Bending deflection of the gear blank
or gear rim
? Contact deflection of surfaces under
Hertzian stress
Even with close to perfectly manufactured gear geometry, due to this elastic
deformation under load, the flank position will shift relative to the theoretical unloaded position (Ref.5). There
will be interference between the gear
teeth with the subsequent, not-yetloaded gear teeth, which are about to
enter the mesh (Fig.3), causing periodic noise excitation. This interference
can be compensated for by appropriate
profile modification, which only can be
optimized for one load level. If not addressed appropriately, the subsequent
teeth will come into contact prematurely outside the path of contact (¡°premature gear mesh¡±) and may cause
stretch marks (Fig.3).
Dynamic excitation. Even with perfect profile modification preventing
an interference between the mating
gear teeth entering the gear mesh, the
total mesh stiffness varies considerably
along the path of contact. This is caused
by the influences as described in Figure
2 and, moreover, in the change between
single and double tooth contact along
the path of contact. Especially for spur
gears, two indicators for excitation can
be derived from this change of stiffness
(Fig.4):
? Transmission error, which is the
static deflection between pinion and
wheel under load, ignoring mass
acceleration forces, and describes
the oscillation of output speed at constant input speed.
? Force excitation, which is the
maximum dynamic force created
by the transmission error without
compensating movement of masses
(i.e., rigid masses). It may be used
as the force parameter to evaluate
the level of excitation, but does not,
however, consider the real dynamic
system.</p>
10 Jul,2020