Deciphering Important Visual Features of Wear Particles

Jim Fitch, Noria Corporation
Tags: wear debris analysis

When working from a single sample, it is common for labs to classify wear particles according to standardized shapes such as platelets, chunks, ribbons and spheres. The task of deriving meaning from the number and size of particles in the different classifications is much more difficult. Condition monitoring is not about science - it’s about understanding and reporting what is happening, why it’s happening, where it’s happening, and how severe or threatening the condition might be. This can be a daunting task, to say the least, especially if you are not being assisted by a particle-counting technology.

The lubricant co-exists with the machine and has an active presence in its critical frictional zones. As such, the progression of wear-related machine failures does not go unnoticed by the lubricant. The byproducts of wear and surface damage become suspended in the lubricant, embedded in the filter, or stratified as sediment in nooks and crannies.

As failure advances, most wear modes produce more particles, and some also produce larger particles. In certain cases, what was thought to be an advanced failure state may suddenly appear benign or in decline. There are reasons for this, so do not be fooled. The wounds and excavations from wear do not heal over on their own.

The time has come to increase the specificity of wear particle characterization. The four basic shapes were a good start, but there is much more we can learn and apply. For those who understand vibration, imagine being limited to vibration overalls or only what is produced in the low-frequency velocity spectrum. Likewise, thermal imaging has shown us how to look far beyond discrete temperature values or trends. This analogy applies to wear debris analysis as well. The appearance of particles holds many clues that generally go unnoticed or are just not understood.

The Characterization of Particles (ASTM D7684)

Any good tribologist will tell you that real failure modes rarely conform to strict theoretical models - rather, they are more complex and are usually the combination of many contributing factors and conditions. There are exceptions - for instance, it is easy to recognize the shapes from cutting wear and normal rubbing wear - but that’s basically where the simplicity comes to an end.

Understanding chunks and platelets requires closer examination and greater skill. Factoring in size, color, heat tinting, slide orientation, texture, and count, plus an array of other features in the same debris field, is the tribologist’s task. Yet, we don’t really have many formally trained tribologists in condition monitoring.

The recently published standard ASTM D7684, Microscopic Characterization of Particles from In-Service Lubricants, went far to add greater granularity and guidance, as shown in the examples below from its classification grid:

Even with the help of D7684, many lab analysts fail to connect the dots between wear debris characterization and the needed maintenance response. Often, connecting the dots requires the aid of careful machine inspection and findings from other condition monitoring methods (vibe, etc.).


Table 1 Example locations of contact dynamics zones
in lubricated Machines.

Introducing the WPCD Table

The discussion that follows offers some valuable tips on how to get more condition monitoring value from wear particle analysis and identification. A high percentage of wear particles found in in-service lubricating oils are produced from pure sliding contact (abrasion and adhesion), rolling contact (Hertzian) or various mixtures of the two. Therefore, this article will focus specifically on particle generation mechanisms from machine surfaces in various states of rolling and sliding contact.

To streamline the discussion, I’m not going to include the following types of particles, which will be addressed at a later time:

Table 1 shows five Contact Dynamics Zones. The top zone is 100 percent rolling contact, and the bottom is 100 percent sliding contact. The three middle zones are binary mixtures of the two. I have added examples of where they might be found in common machines.

These zones also appear on the Wear Particle Contact Dynamic (WPCD) table in Table 2. The five columns across the top of the WPCD table are Wear Protection States, ranging from no protection to high protection. Based on the well-known Stribeck Curve (AKA the ZN/P curve), these states are directly influenced by oil viscosity, surface speed, contact load and additive film strength. For rolling contacts (e.g., ball bearings), specific film thickness (Lambda) is also influenced by composite surface roughness. Refer to the chart in Figure 1 or visit our article on the Stribeck curve for more information.


Figure 1 The Stribeck Curve showing the states
of protection against mechanical wear.

Rooted in Tribology

Very little of what happens between surfaces in relative motion should be viewed as simple or even predictable; this holds true for the formation of particles generated there. With this in mind, the 25 cells shown in the WPCD Table are coded with letters corresponding to likely wear modes - these are approximations based on experience and findings from controlled laboratory experiments. Let's get more specific about each of these likely wear modes, as they will have a considerable effect on your particle counts and condition monitoring practices.

Normal Rubbing Wear. These particles result from mild and slightly adhesive cyclic rubbing contact. They are often described as traction-induced exfoliation or peeling of the shear-mixed layer (asperities). Small abrasive particles interposed between frictional surfaces can increase the concentration of rubbing wear. Most appear as thin flakes or platelets with polished surfaces on both faces; others may be somewhat more granular from rolling-sliding contact.

Adhesive Wear. Caused by moderate to high traction forces from impaired lubrication or high contact loads in sliding frictional zones. The wear modes are more pronounced where longer sliding planes/tracks exist (e.g., large gear teeth). High tangential forces and frictional heat transfer loosened metal from one surface to the other or released it into the oil as dislocated fragments. Particles have smooth, distressed or striated surfaces; striation is generally from two-body abrasion. Many exhibit the appearance of a momentary molten state (micro-welding).

Pitting (Micro & Macro). These particles can be formed due to rubbing or adhesive contact, as well as rolling contact fatigue. Micropitting occurs where particles - usually less than 20 microns in size - dislodge. Macropitting is similar to micropitting, except the size of the pits and particles are larger than 20 microns, often as a result of an advanced state of micropitting.

Rolling Contact Fatigue. These are often due to contact (surface) fatigue aided by mild sliding contact (traction). Particles may appear peeled from delamination. Many have smooth surfaces (face side) with irregular edges. They may appear thin and platelet-shaped - similar to laminar particles but without the flattened over-rolled appearance.


Figure 2 Gears often form a network of deep
checkered cracks across or near the pitch line.
When they get deep enough and converge, small pieces
are pulled out by sliding traction to form
chunklike particles, leaving spalled surface damage behind.

Rolling Traction Fatigue. This results from a combination of rolling and sliding under elasto-hydrodynamic lubrication (EHL) conditions. Cyclic Hertzian loads radiate downward, which propagates crack formation and subsurface fatigue from repeated flexing. Combined sliding produces traction forces, dislocating particles from the socket of the bruised area. Subsequent rolling contact produces downward flaking at edges, causing the damaged area to spall-out further.

Premature fatigue often occurs due to the over-rolling of hard contaminant particles (e.g., silica), which induces surface indentations and berms (stress risers). These are initiation sites for cracking, flaking and spall-out conditions.

Chunklike particles from rolling traction fatigue typically exhibit fractured or torn surfaces and edges. Some may show a less chunky appearance, such as a thick platelet with varying shapes and profiles.

Fatigue particles generated by a ball bearing may resemble a rose petal shape. Torn or feathered edges are common. They are frequently subjected to over-rolling (rework), which alters appearance, producing a more laminar shape.


Table 2 The Wear Particle Contact Dynamics (WPCD) Table.
The letters under the Wear Protection columns are
described in the legend at the bottom of the table.

The particle’s face may have striations or the appearance of adhesion (micro welding). Heat-tinting from friction/adhesion may exhibit colors from straw to brown to blue.

Sliding Wear (Abrasion/Adhesion). Often occurs in high slide-to-roll or slide-only frictional zones. Boundary lubrication conditions from highly-loaded, low-speed conditions where only anti-scuff/AW additives play a role in mitigating friction and wear. More pronounced from longer sliding planes/tracks (e.g., large gear teeth), high traction forces due to boundary conditions and sliding serve to lift and dislodge fragments producing surface spalls. In gearing, the condition may be more pronounced across the dedendum zone of the gear tooth flank (below pitch line towards the root).

Large particles with long straight edges and rectangular shapes are common. Otherwise, particles may have highly irregular shapes, and their edges may appear sharp or jagged. The base surface (opposite particle face) will appear torn or fractured.

Evidence of abrasion, scoring or adhesion on the particle face is common. Deep striations may crisscross, travel the length of the particle (in the direction of elongation) or converge to the central region. Heat-tinting from friction may leave colors from straw to brown to blue.

Black Oxides. Black iron oxides are typically clusters of small pebble-like particles. Dark-metallo oxides may be larger, possessing the shape and size of rolling traction fatigue or adhesive wear particles. Most will have a free metal core with an oxide shell. Particles are very dark or black in appearance but may have small blue and orange dots near the lower limit of an optical microscope. Edges will transmit some light. Black oxides are associated with poor lubrication and steel-on-steel contact.


Table 3 This version of the WPCD Table
replaces the cell wear mode designations with example particle images.

Particle Size and Count

The WCPD Table in Table 3 has been re-casted to show images of example particles corresponding to the cells’ failure modes. Note, there is no reference (or scale) related to particle size. The purpose of the table is to emphasize and distinguish characteristic visual features of particle shape and texture. These features provide important clues related to wear modes and wear location.

It is widely known that particle size generally correlates to failure stage or severity. For instance, particles on the left side of the table are distinctly larger (>50 microns) than those on the right side of the table (<15 microns). Large particles are even more pronounced in the cells in the upper-left zone of the table. Fatigue particles frequently produce larger particles (at advanced wear stages) than those produced from two-body abrasion, scuffing and adhesive wear.

The population of wear particles at different sizes and shapes is important too and can help estimate the particle generation rate related to the precipitous state of the failure. However, particle concentrations are influenced by other factors too, including:

Because of this added complexity, it is often better to view the particle size distribution in terms of rate-of-change and size ratios (or percent large particles). If both increase significantly, the machine could be approaching an end-of-life condition.

Work Backwards

The best approach is to use the ASTM D7684 Classification Grid and the WPCD Table together. A careful examination of particle size, shape, edge detail and texture reveals much about contact dynamics and surface protection (position on the Stribeck curve). From there, you can work backward to better understand and report condition monitoring information and prescriptive response:

Include relevant facts and data from inspection and other condition monitoring tests.

The potential for deciphering the hidden messages in wear particles depends heavily on training and practice. Over time, wear debris analysis can and should become a far more powerful early-detection condition monitoring tool.