2005
DOI: 10.4028/www.scientific.net/kem.297-300.1406
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Finite Element Analysis of Fretting Wear Problems in Consideration of Frictional Contact

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Cited by 19 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Numerical methods for solving the fretting wear contact problem of the type ( 12), ( 13) were developed in a number of studies, of which we refer especially to the papers by McColl et al (2004), Chai et al (2005), Mary and Fouvry (2007), and Bae et al (2009) on finite-element simulations and (Serre et al, 2001;Sfantos and Aliabadi, 2006) on boundary-element simulations. Alternatives to finite and boundary element methods were proposed by Lee et al (2009), using the influence function method, and (Nowell, 2010), using a quadratic programming technique.…”
Section: Formulation Of the Model Wear Contact Problemmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Numerical methods for solving the fretting wear contact problem of the type ( 12), ( 13) were developed in a number of studies, of which we refer especially to the papers by McColl et al (2004), Chai et al (2005), Mary and Fouvry (2007), and Bae et al (2009) on finite-element simulations and (Serre et al, 2001;Sfantos and Aliabadi, 2006) on boundary-element simulations. Alternatives to finite and boundary element methods were proposed by Lee et al (2009), using the influence function method, and (Nowell, 2010), using a quadratic programming technique.…”
Section: Formulation Of the Model Wear Contact Problemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fretting phenomena, including fretting wear and accompanied variation of contact geometry, are encountered in many industrial applications, where contact parts experience oscillating small relative movements. For instance, the fretting wear characteristics of Inconel 690 U-tubes strongly influences the structural integrity of steam generators in nuclear power plants (Chai et al, 2005;Lee et al, 2009). The problem of contact geometry adaptation in fretting wear can be formulated as a spatial-temporal contact problem with a variable contact geometry.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Numerical methods for solving the fretting wear contact problem of the type (12), (13) were developed in a number of studies, of which we refer especially to the papers by McColl et al 2004, Chai et al (2005), Mary and Fouvry (2007), and Bae et al 2009on finite-element simulations and (Serre et al, 2001;Sfantos and Aliabadi, 2006) on boundary-element simulations. Alternatives to finite and boundary element methods were proposed by Lee et al (2009), using the influence function method, and (Nowell, 2010), using a quadratic programming technique.…”
Section: Formulation Of the Model Wear Contact Problemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fretting phenomena, including fretting wear and accompanied variation of contact geometry, are encountered in many industrial applications, where contact parts experience oscillating small relative movements. For instance, the fretting wear characteristics of Inconel 690 U-tubes strongly influences the structural integrity of steam generators in nuclear power plants (Chai et al, 2005;Lee et al, 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fretting wear is a complex mechanical process of surface damage accumulation in loaded contacts of tribosystems, which are subject to oscillatory tangential displacements at low amplitude [1]. Fretting fatigue and wear are frequently encountered in critical engineering sectors, such as nuclear [2,3] and aerospace [4].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%