Actuators, Vol. 15, Pages 89: Failure Mechanism and Biomimetic Wiping Self-Cleaning Design of Micro-Current Snap-Action Limit Switches for Marine Environments


Actuators, Vol. 15, Pages 89: Failure Mechanism and Biomimetic Wiping Self-Cleaning Design of Micro-Current Snap-Action Limit Switches for Marine Environments

Actuators doi: 10.3390/act15020089

Authors:
Yuhang Zhong
Xiaolong Zhao
Chengfei Zhang
Yuliang Teng
Zhuxin Zhang
Dingxuan Zhao

In marine hot–humid and salt spray environments, shipborne snap-action limit switches operating under micro-current loads are prone to triggering failures caused by the accumulation of heterogeneous films on electrical contact interfaces, which can induce abnormal behavior in electromechanical systems. To address this issue, this study systematically investigates the failure mechanisms of micro-current limit switches using multimodal diagnostic approaches. The results demonstrate that the migration and accumulation of corrosion products and foreign contaminants within the microswitch unit promote the formation of high-resistance heterogeneous films at the electrical contact interfaces, severely impairing reliable electrical conduction. Electrical contact experiments further reveal that the contact behavior is strongly dependent on the current magnitude. When the current exceeds 2A, arc discharge generated during contact closure can effectively disrupt and remove the heterogeneous films, thereby restoring the electrical functionality of previously failed switches under subsequent micro-current operating conditions. Based on the identified failure mechanism, and inspired by the natural eye-cleaning behavior of crabs, a biomimetic press-and-wipe self-cleaning dual-redundant limit switch design is proposed. The design enables autonomous surface cleaning through controlled reciprocal wiping between the moving and stationary electrical contacts, effectively suppressing the formation and accumulation of high-resistance films at the source. Comparative salt spray and damp heat storage tests demonstrate that the proposed self-cleaning limit switch maintains stable and reliable electrical contact performance in simulated marine environments, significantly improving operational reliability and service life under micro-current loads. This work provides both mechanistic insights and a practical structural solution for enhancing the reliability of electrical contact components operating under low-current conditions in harsh marine environments.



Source link

Yuhang Zhong www.mdpi.com