Development of Sintered Bearing Material with Higher Corrosion Resistance for Fuel Pumps 2007-01-0415
In recent years, due to a growing demand for improvement in the performance and reliability of automotive fuel pumps and the advancement of globalization, automotive fuel pumps are being used with inferior gasolines that include more sulfur, organic acids or compounds, compared to gasolines used in general regions. Conventionally, bearings in these fuel pumps have mainly been made of sintered bronze alloy. With this bronze alloy, however, it is difficult to achieve a significant improvement in the tribology characteristics of bearings, in order to meet the demands for performance improvement, etc., and corrosion is severe in inferior gasolines that contain highly-concentrated organic acids or sulfur and the corrosion products that accompany them. Therefore, in order to obtain fine tribology characteristics and superior corrosion resistance in gasolines with highly-concentrated organic acids and sulfur, various copper-based alloys were studied using the powder metallurgy process. As a result, graphite dispersed Cu-Ni sintered alloys having a high tin alloy layer showed superior corrosion resistance and fine tribology characteristics when lubricated with a gasoline containing highly-concentrated organic acids and sulfur.
Citation: Nozu, T., Murakami, Y., Inayoshi, N., Ooi, K. et al., "Development of Sintered Bearing Material with Higher Corrosion Resistance for Fuel Pumps," SAE Technical Paper 2007-01-0415, 2007, https://doi.org/10.4271/2007-01-0415. Download Citation
Affiliated:
DENSO Corporation, Mitsubishi Material PMG Co., Ltd.
Pages: 8
Event:
SAE World Congress & Exhibition
ISSN:
0148-7191
e-ISSN:
2688-3627
Also in:
Body Engineering and Design, Glass Applications, Corrosion Prevention and Design Tools-SP-2069, SAE 2007 Transactions Journal of Materials and Manufacturing-V116-5
Related Topics:
Fuel pumps
Tin alloys
Powder metallurgy
Tribology
Corrosion
Gasoline
Graphite
Alloys
Drag
Bearings
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