Study on the Changing Rule of Deformation and Performance of Hard-tooth Surface Heat Treatment of Spiral Bevel Gear and Its Cooperative Control

Spiral bevel gears are critical components in automotive and aerospace systems due to their high load capacity and smooth operation. This study investigates the deformation and performance evolution during hard-tooth surface heat treatment (carburizing, quenching, and tempering) through multi-field coupling simulations and experimental validation. A systematic approach combining numerical modeling, machine learning optimization, and database development is presented to achieve collaborative control of gear quality.

1. Multi-field Coupling Simulation

The finite element model incorporates temperature field, carbon diffusion, phase transformation, and stress-strain coupling effects. Key governing equations include:

Heat transfer equation:
$$ \rho C_p \frac{\partial T}{\partial t} = \nabla \cdot (\lambda \nabla T) + Q_{phase} $$

Carbon diffusion (Fick’s law):
$$ \frac{\partial C}{\partial t} = \nabla \cdot (D(T,C)\nabla C) $$

Phase transformation kinetics:
$$ f = 1 – \exp(-kt^n) $$

Element C Cr Mn Ti Fe
wt% 0.20 1.15 0.95 0.07 Bal.

2. Process Parameter Analysis

Parameter Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Level 4
Carburizing Temp (°C) 880 900 920 940
Quenching Temp (°C) 840 860 880 900
Carbon Potential (%) 0.95 1.15 1.30 1.45

3. Cooperative Control Optimization

Neural network architecture:
$$ y_k = \sum_{j=1}^{10} w_{kj} \cdot \sigma\left(\sum_{i=1}^8 w_{ji}x_i + b_j\right) $$

PSO velocity update:
$$ v_{id}^{t+1} = \omega v_{id}^t + c_1r_1(p_{id}-x_{id}^t) + c_2r_2(g_d-x_{id}^t) $$

Parameter Value Improvement
Surface Hardness 59.62 HRC +0.75 HRC
Core Hardness 40.20 HRC +0.06 HRC
Profile Error 0.8099 mm -0.1361 mm

4. Experimental Validation

Residual stress comparison:
$$ \sigma_{sim} = 195.2\ MPa,\ \sigma_{exp} = 201.5\ MPa\ (3.1\%\ error) $$

Position Simulation (mm) Experiment (mm)
Tooth Tip 1.87 1.82
Flank 1.68 1.63

Conclusion

This research establishes a comprehensive framework for controlling spiral bevel gear quality during hard-tooth surface heat treatment. The integrated numerical-experimental approach reduces development cycles by 40% compared with traditional trial-and-error methods. Future work will incorporate machining-induced residual stresses into the multi-field coupling model for enhanced prediction accuracy.

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