We aimed to address the issue of fretting wear on the rollers and raceways of pitch bearings in wind turbines during shutdown and under intermittent high loads. This study focuses on triple-row cylindrical roller bearings. A finite element wear simulation of the contact area between a single roller and the raceway was established based on Hertzian contact theory and the modified Archard model. The wear coefficient values of the model before and after coating were verified through experiments, with results of k1 = 3.125 × 10−8 and k2 = 4.5 × 10−10, respectively. The effects of normal load, displacement amplitude, and cycle number on the fretting wear behavior of rollers under both uncoated and GLC-coated conditions were investigated. The results show that the GLC (Glassy Carbon-like Carbon) film significantly reduces the friction coefficient and wear. Compared to uncoated rollers, it reduces the maximum wear depth by approximately 90.53% across various normal loads, displacement amplitudes, and numbers of cycles. Additionally, the wear rate of the coated rollers remains consistently low with small fluctuations. The conclusion holds that the GLC film reduces the interface shear force and effective slip amplitude, enhances surface hardness and stability, and improves the fretting wear resistance of pitch bearings by an order of magnitude under complex load and oil-starved conditions. The primary objective of this work is to investigate the mechanisms for enhancing the anti-fretting wear performance of pitch bearings, with the goal of significantly extending their service life and reliability in harsh operating environments.
Pang et al. (Mon,) studied this question.