Andreas Rosenkranz
University of California, San Diego
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Featured researches published by Andreas Rosenkranz.
Tribology Letters | 2013
Nikolay Prodanov; Carsten Gachot; Andreas Rosenkranz; Frank Mücklich; Martin H. Müser
We study numerically the contact mechanics of a flat and a curved solid. Each solid bears laser-induced, periodic grooves on its rubbing surface. Our surface topographies produce a similar load and resolution dependence of the true contact area as nominally flat, but randomly rough, self-affine surfaces. However, the contact area of laser-textured solids depends on their relative orientation. The estimated true contact areas correlate with kinetic friction measurements.
Key Engineering Materials | 2014
Adam Szurdak; Andreas Rosenkranz; Carsten Gachot; Gerhard Hirt; Frank Mücklich
Friction and wear of lubricated machine elements can be reduced by the introduction of lubrication pockets produced by surface texturing. Different manufacturing methods can be taken into consideration whereas a forming process offers the possibility for mass production. Hot micro coining is a forming process, which allows manufacturing of surface textures with different shapes and dimensions into a flat and deformable material, e.g. seals made of steel. In this work hemispherical and ellipsoid pockets with a maximum depth of 100 µm have been embossed into stainless steel (AISI 304). To ensure that the used process parameters will not lead to tool damage, Finite Element simulations were performed and experimentally verified. First tribological experiments were conducted on a ball-on-disk tribometer in order to study the tribological properties of hemispherical structures with pockets depths of 50 and 100 µm. Different sliding velocities were applied to study the coefficient of friction and wear volume for different lubrication conditions. A comparison between coined and not‑coined specimens demonstrates that the micro coined surface textures lead to a significant reduction in the wear volume at boundary and mixed lubrication conditions.
Surface Topography: Metrology and Properties | 2016
Andreas Rosenkranz; Philipp G Gruetzmacher; Adam Szurdak; Carsten Gachot; Gerhard Hirt; Frank Muecklich
In this study, the anisotropic spreading behavior of Poly-(alpha)-olefin oil (kinematic viscosity of 7.8 cSt at 100 °C) on stainless steel samples (AISI 403) having periodic, channel-like structures produced by hot micro-coining (periodicity of 400 μm and depth of 40 μm) as well as multi-scale structures (coining and laser patterning) was investigated. These results were compared to the behavior of periodic channels fabricated by direct laser interference patterning (periodicity of 5 μm and depth of 1 μm). The spreading behavior of a droplet (3 μl) was studied for a polished reference as well as for all modified surfaces and recorded by a digital light microscope. From this study, it can be concluded that the polished reference leads to an isotropic spreading behavior resulting from the stochastic surface roughness without any preferential orientation whereas all structured samples induce an anisotropic spreading behavior but with different degrees of anisotropy. The observed behavior can be well correlated with pinning induced by the grooves thus hindering the droplet propagation perpendicular to the grooves and the generation of capillary forces which favor the droplet movement along the grooves. It could be proved that the structural depth is a very desicive parameter with regard to the resulting spreading behavior. The multi-scale surface combining large structural depths and the steeper pattern geometry of the micro-coined surface with much smaller grooves of the laser-structure shows the largest anisotropic spreading behavior due to a stronger pinning and increased capillary forces.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2017
Andrés Fabián Lasagni; Carsten Gachot; Kim E. Trinh; Michael Hans; Andreas Rosenkranz; Teja Roch; Sebastian Eckhardt; Tim Kunze; Matthias Bieda; Denise Günther; Valentin Lang; Frank Mücklich
Starting from a simple concept, transferring the shape of an interference pattern directly to the surface of a material, the method of Direct Laser Interference Patterning (DLIP) has been continuously developed in the last 20 years. From lamp-pumped to high power diode-pumped lasers, DLIP permits today for the achievement of impressive processing speeds even close to 1 m2/min. The objective: to improve the performance of surfaces by the use of periodically ordered micro- and nanostructures. This study describes 20 years of evolution of the DLIP method in Germany. From the structuring of thin metallic films to bulk materials using nano- and picosecond laser systems, going through different optical setups and industrial systems which have been recently developed. Several technological applications are discussed and summarized in this article including: surface micro-metallurgy, tribology, electrical connectors, biological interfaces, thin film organic solar cells and electrodes as well as decorative elements and safety features. In all cases, DLIP has not only shown to provide outstanding surface properties but also outstanding economic advantages compared to traditional methods.
Industrial Lubrication and Tribology | 2017
Andreas Rosenkranz; Saad Ahmed Khan; Adam Szurdak; Gerhard Hirt; Carsten Gachot
Purpose The purpose of this study is to investigate the influence of hemispherical structures fabricated by hot micro-coining on the resulting wear performance. Hemispherical structures with different area densities (20 and 30 per cent), depths (50 and 100 µm) and diameters (100 and 200 µm) were fabricated by hot micro-coining on stainless steel samples. Design/methodology/approach The wear performance of these samples was studied using a ball-on-disk tribometer in rotational sliding mode using a normal load of 30 N and a fixed sliding velocity of 2 cm/s. Two different poly-(alpha)-olefin (PAO) oils without any additive having a kinematic viscosity of 4 and 40 cSt, were used to study the influence of the oil viscosity on the wear behavior. Findings Concerning the polished reference, an enlarged wear volume with an increase in the cycle number and the oil viscosity was observed. In the case of the micro-coined surfaces, all samples demonstrate a pronounced reduction in the wear volume (up to a factor of 100 for PAO 40) compared to the polished reference irrespective of the oil viscosity used. Originality/value This study details new research work studying the wear behavior of hot micro-coined surfaces.
IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering | 2017
Shiqi Fang; L. Llanes; Sven Klein; Carsten Gachot; Andreas Rosenkranz; Dirk Bähre; Frank Mücklich
Cemented carbides are advanced engineering materials often used in industry for manufacturing cutting tools or supporting parts in tribological system. In order to improve service life, special attention has been paid to change surface conditions by means of different methods, since surface modification can be beneficial to reduce the friction between the contact surfaces as well as to avoid unintended damage. Laser surface texturing is one of the newly developed surface modification methods. It has been successfully introduced to fabricate some basic patterns on cemented carbide surfaces. In this work, Direct Laser Interference Patterning Technique (DLIP) is implemented to produce special line-like patterns on a cobalt (Co) and nickel (Ni) based cemented tungsten carbide grade. It is proven that the laser-produced patterns have high geometrical precision and quality stability. Furthermore, tribology testing using a nano-tribometer unit shows that friction is reduced by the line-like patterns, as compared to the polished one, under both lubricated and dry testing regimes, and the reduction is more pronounced in the latter case.
Tribology Letters | 2018
Young Woo Seo; Andreas Rosenkranz; Frank E. Talke
Lubricant transfer is investigated versus temperature, local pressure change and disk velocity considering lubricant fragmentation for four different types of perfluoropolyether. Lubricant transfer and lubricant fragmentation are found to increase with temperature, local pressure change and velocity of the moving disk. The local pressure change is observed to be the most important parameter accelerating lubricant fragmentation.
Tribology Letters | 2018
Andreas Rosenkranz; Lindsay M. Freeman; Benjamin Suen; Yeshaiahu Fainman; Frank E. Talke
Far-field Raman spectroscopy and tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy were used to investigate 20-nm-thick amorphous carbon films and 3-nm-thick carbon overcoats of commercial hard disk drives. Enhancement of the Raman signal on both samples was observed indicating the activation of surface plasmons. The largest enhancement was found for the 3-nm-thick carbon overcoat of a commercial hard disk suggesting that the chemistry of nanometer-thick carbon films can be studied using tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy with high sensitivity and resolution.
Wear | 2017
Carsten Gachot; Andreas Rosenkranz; S.M. Hsu; H.L. Costa
Tribology Letters | 2013
Carsten Gachot; Andreas Rosenkranz; Leander Reinert; Esteban Ramos-Moore; Nicolas Souza; Martin H. Müser; Frank Mücklich