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Reliability Assessment of Planetary Pin Position...
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Reliability Assessment of Planetary Pin Position Errors in Large-Scale Aerospace Planetary Systems Based on the Kriging Model

Abstract

Planetary gear systems, serving as core components for high-precision power transmission in engineering applications, exhibit compromised reliability due to nonlinear dynamic interactions between component flexibility and manufacturing/assembly errors. Conventional rigid-body assumptions and single-factor analyses fail to address multi-source deformation effects, while Monte Carlo simulations prove computationally prohibitive for multiobjective optimization under complex operating conditions. This study develops a Kriging surrogate-enhanced framework integrating finite element dynamics with flexible planet carrier modeling to resolve the coupling mechanism between carrier deformation and pin positional errors. The methodology enables global multi-condition optimization through systematic acquisition of error-induced load/stress distributions and reliability predictions. The results demonstrate that the tangential position error has a considerably greater impact on reliability than the radial error. The surrogate model achieves computational efficiency improvement while accurately capturing the nonlinear threshold effect of error-reliability. This provides a highly efficient decision-making framework for balancing the manufacturing tolerance and system reliability, and significantly improves the analysis efficiency and engineering applicability.

Authors

Li M; Ji P; Shi C; Xie L

Volume

00

Pagination

pp. 313-320

Publisher

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)

Publication Date

April 13, 2025

DOI

10.1109/isssr65654.2025.00051

Name of conference

2025 11th International Symposium on System Security, Safety, and Reliability (ISSSR)

Labels

Sustainable Development Goals (SDG)

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