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1.
The tribology of molybdenum disulfide (MoS2)–Sb2O3–C films was tested under a variety of environmental conditions (ambient 50% RH, 10−7 Torr vacuum, 150 Torr oxygen, and 8 Torr water) and correlated with the composition of the surface composition expressed while sliding. High friction and low friction modes of behavior were detected. The lowest coefficient of friction, 0.06, was achieved under vacuum, while sliding in 8 Torr water and ambient conditions both yielded the highest value of 0.15. Water vapor was determined to be the environmental species responsible for high friction performance. XPS evaluations revealed a preferential expression of MoS2 at the surface of wear tracks produced under vacuum and an increase in Sb2O3 concentration in wear tracks produced in ambient air (50% RH). In addition, wear tracks produced by sliding in vacuum exhibited the lowest surface roughness as compared to those produced in other environments, consistent with the picture of low friction originating from well-ordered MoS2 layers produced through sliding in vacuum.  相似文献   

2.
Eight pin-on-disk tribometers have been made for testing materials in space on board the International Space Station. They will be exposed directly to the low earth orbit (LEO) environment on board the “Materials on the International Space Station Experiments” platform where they will experience extreme conditions including atomic oxygen, ultrahigh vacuum, radiation (including UV radiation), and thermal ranges from −40 to 60 °C. In order to survive launch and LEO, these tribometers were designed to be extremely compact, rugged, and reliable. Pin-on-disk tribology experiments are now being performed with a 13.2 mm/s sliding velocity (14 RPM at 9 mm wear track radius) and a 1 N normal load with hemispherical pin of 1.5875 mm radius. Materials tested include MoS2/Sb2O3/Au, MoS2/Sb2O3/C, YSZ/Au/MoS2/DLC, and SiO-doped DLC coatings, and bulk samples of polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) alumina nanocomposites and gold.  相似文献   

3.
MoS2–Sb2O3–C composite films exhibit adaptive behavior, where surface chemistry changes with environment to maintain the good friction and wear characteristics. In previous work on nanocomposite coatings grown by PVD, this type of material was called a “chameleon” coating. Coatings used in this report were applied by burnishing mixed powders of MoS2, Sb2O3 and graphite. The solid lubricant MoS2 and graphite were selected to lubricate over a wide and complementary range including vacuum, dry air and humid air. Sb2O3 was used as a dopant because it acts synergistically with MoS2, improving friction and wear properties. The MoS2–Sb2O3–C composite films showed lower friction and longer wear life than either single component MoS2 or C film in humid air. Very or even super low friction and long wear-life were observed in dry nitrogen and vacuum. The excellent tribological performance was verified and repeated in cycles between humid air and dry nitrogen. The formation of tribo-films at rubbing contacts was studied to identify the lubricating chemistry and microstructure, which varied with environmental conditions. Micro-Raman spectroscopy and Auger electron spectroscopy (AES) were used to determine surface chemistry, while scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy were used for microstructural analysis. The tribological improvement and lubrication mechanism of MoS2–Sb2O3–C composite films were caused by enrichment of the active lubricant at the contact surface, alignment of the crystal orientation of the lubricant grains, and enrichment of the non lubricant materials below the surface. Sb2O3, which is not lubricious, was covered by the active lubricants (MoS2 – dry, C – humid air). Clearly, the dynamics of friction during environmental cycling cleaned some Sb2O3 particles of one lubricant and coated it with the active lubricant for the specific environment. Mechanisms of lubrication and the role of the different materials will be discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The friction and wear properties of phosphor bronze and nanocrystalline nickel coatings were evaluated using a reciprocating ball-on-plates UMT-2MT sliding tester lubricated with ionic liquid and poly-alpha-olefin containing molybdenum dialkyl dithiocarbamate, respectively. The morphologies of the worn surfaces for the phosphor bronze and nanocrystalline nickel coatings were observed using a scanning electron microscope. The chemical states of several typical elements on the worn surfaces were examined by means of X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Results show that the phosphor bronze and nanocrystalline nickel coatings exhibited quite different tribological behaviors under different lubricants. Phosphor bronze plate shows higher friction coefficient (0.14) and wear rate (3.2 × 10−5 mm3/Nm) than nanocrystalline nickel coatings (average friction coefficient is 0.097, wear rate is 1.75 × 10−6 mm3/Nm) under poly-alpha-olefin containing molybdenum dialkyl dithiocarbamate lubricated conditions. The excellent tribological performance of nanocrystalline nickel coatings under above lubricant can be attributed to the formation of MoS2 and MoO3 on the sliding surface. a quite a number of C, O and F products on worn surface of phosphor bronze than NC nickel coatings can improve anti-wear properties while using ionic liquid as lubricant.  相似文献   

5.
The tribology of nanoparticles based on transition metal dichalcogenides has been studied extensively. However, evaluation of metal chalcogenides with other stoichiometries has been lacking. We have studied the friction, endurance, and tribochemistry of bonded molybdenum trisulfide (MoS3) nanoparticle-based coatings for the first time. A facile aqueous chemistry method was used to fabricate the MoS3 nanoparticles. Pin-on-disk tribometry of an MoS3 coating using phenolic resin as the binder was conducted in a dry N2 atmosphere (0.06 % RH, using normal loads of 5 N and 10 N). The results were compared with two types of commercial bonded coatings based on the solid lubricant molybdenum disulfide (MoS2), as well as a bonded coating we formulated with commercial MoS2 nanoparticles. Surprisingly, the MoS3 coating showed similar lubricating ability to the MoS2-based coatings, exhibiting average μ k < 0.05 and endurance greater than a million cycles. To evaluate the tribochemistry occurring in the contact region, tribotesting of an MoS3 coating was halted when steady-state low friction was achieved (i.e., prefailure). Raman spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and X-ray diffraction on the surface of this wear track showed that the MoS3 had undergone a tribochemical reaction to form the solid lubricant MoS2, which explains the excellent lubricity of the coating. This result opens up the possibility of developing MoS3 nanoparticle-based solid lubricant coatings and MoS3 nanoparticle additives for oils and greases that are synthetically easier and lower cost than formulations based on MoS2 nanoparticles.  相似文献   

6.
The fact. that dopants improve the friction and wear properties of sputtered MoS2 films is well known. However, the role of dopants in the mechanisms governing friction and wear are not well understood. The purpose of this work is to gain a fundamental understanding of their role by co-depositing a number of materials, i.e., Ni, Fe, Au, and. Sb2O3, with MoS2 and evaluating their effects on film chemistry, crystallinity, microstructure, and tribology. Friction and wear measurements were collected, using ball-on-flat and dual-rub shoe tribom-eters. Other physical and chemical properties were obtained using SEM, XPS, XRD) and Raman spectroscopy. Crystalline MoS2 was seen in all of the films. In Sb2O3-doped films, an amorphous phase was also observed. The presence of dopants caused film densification and affected crystallite size. They had little effect on the overall crystallite orientation. In addition, dopants caused a reduction in the mean and. variance of the friction coefficient and an increase in wear life. The correlation between dopants, film properties, and tribology is discussed in detail.  相似文献   

7.
Nano-structured TiAlCrYN coatings, grown by unbalanced magnetron sputtering on various steel substrates, exhibited friction coefficients 0.6–0.8 and wear coefficients 10−16–10−15 m3 N−1 m−1 in dry sliding wear tests. This article reports comprehensive worn surface analyses using SEM, TEM, EDX, EELS and Raman spectroscopy. A ~80 nm thick tribofilm formed on the TiAlCrYN worn surface was found to have dense amorphous structure and homogeneous oxide composition of Cr0.39Al0.19Ti0.20Y0.01O0.21. Viscous flow of the amorphous tribofilm was dominant in causing the high friction coefficient observed. The coatings showed combined wear mechanisms of tribo-oxidation and nano-scale delamination.  相似文献   

8.
Self-lubricating ZrO2(Y2O3)–Al2O3–Ba x Sr1−x SO4 (x = 0.25, 0.5, 0.75) composites have been fabricated by spark plasma sintering (SPS) method. The tribological properties have been evaluated using a high-temperature friction and wear tester at room temperature and 760 °C in dry sliding against alumina ball. The composites exhibit distinct improvements in effectively reducing friction and wear, as compared to the unmodified ZrO2(Y2O3)–Al2O3 ceramics. The ZrO2(Y2O3)–Al2O3–Ba x Sr1−x SO4 (x = 0.25, 0.5, 0.75) composites have great low and stable friction coefficients of less than 0.15 and wear rates in the order of 10− 6mm3/Nm at 760 °C. Delamination is considered as the dominating wear mechanism of the composites at room temperature. At elevated temperature, the formation and effective spreading of Ba x Sr1−x SO4 (x = 0.25, 0.5, 0.75) lubricating films during sliding play an important role in the reduction of the friction and wear.  相似文献   

9.
The solid lubricant that is coated on a flat surface is easily removed during friction. Surface texture dimples, which act as reservoirs of solid lubricant, can prolong the wear life of solid lubricant films. We textured silver-containing nickel-based alloys by a pulse laser and filled the micro-dimples with molybdenum disulfide powders. The tribological properties of the alloys were tested by rubbing against alloyed steel on a ring-on-disk tribometer at temperatures ranging from room temperature to 600°C . After laser surface texturing, the friction coefficients of the silver-containing nickel-based alloy smeared with molybdenum disulfide powders were reduced at temperatures ranging from room temperature to 400°C. With increasing dimple density, the wear life of the MoS2 film increased while the wear rate of the nickel-based alloy decreased. The wear life of the textured surface with a dimple density of 11.2% exceeded 10,000 m at room temperature. We conclude that molybdenum disulfide and its oxides stored in the micro-dimples play a role in lubrication at room temperature and high temperatures, respectively.  相似文献   

10.
The Ni3Al matrix composites with addition of 10, 15, and 20 wt% BaMoO4 were fabricated by powder metallurgy technique, and the tribological behaviors were studied from room temperature to 800 °C. It was found that BaAl2O4 formed during the fabrication process. The Ni3Al composites showed poor tribological property below 400 °C, with high friction coefficients (above 0.6) and wear rates (above 10−4 mm3/Nm). However, the composites exhibited excellent self-lubricating and anti-wear properties at higher temperatures, and the composite with addition of 15 wt% BaMoO4 had the lowest wear rate (1.10 × 10−5 mm3/Nm) and friction coefficient (0.26). In addition, the results also indicated that BaAl2O4 for the Ni3Al composites did not exhibit lubricating property from room temperature to 800 °C.  相似文献   

11.
The friction and wear properties of the prevailing different solid lubricant coatings (Ion-plated Au, Ion-plated Ag and RF-sputtered PTFE on SUS440C stainless steel) used in the bearings of high-speed cryogenic-turbo-pumps of liquid rocket engines were experimentally evaluated in liquid nitrogen immersed conditions. Also the above experiments were carried out with two newly proposed solid lubricant coatings of sputter-ion-plated MoSTi and a new ion-plated Pb on SUS440C stainless steel. The friction coefficient and wear rates of the coatings of ion-plated Au, ion-plated Ag, RF-sputtered PTFE, the new ion-plated Pb and MoS2Ti-SIP (with coating thickness of 0.7±0.1 μm) on SUS440C steel against SUS440C stainless steel ball in liquid nitrogen were compared. Worn surfaces were examined microscopically with a microscope and a profilometer for understanding the mechanisms of friction and wear and transfer film lubrication in liquid nitrogen. It is found that the newly proposed solid lubricant coatings are showing promising results for their use in liquid nitrogen immersed conditions. The sputter-ion-plated MoSTi coating on SUS 440C steel shows a minimum value of friction coefficient (μ=0.015) and wear rate (wc=0.56 × 10−6 mm3/N m ) in liquid nitrogen.  相似文献   

12.
Woydt  Mathias 《Tribology Letters》2000,8(2-3):117-130
The results presented in this paper have clarified experimentally, that titania-based Magnéli-phases (Ti4O7/Ti5O9 and Ti6O11) with (121)-shear planes exhibit more anti-wear properties than lubricious (low-frictional) properties. The results for dry sliding indicate that the coefficients of friction lie in the range of 0.1–0.6 depending on sliding speed and ambient temperature. The COF decreased with increasing temperature (T= 22–800°C) and increasing sliding speed (υ= 1−6 m/s). The dry sliding wear rate was lowest for the Al2O3 at 1 m/s at 800°C with values of 1.7 × 10−8 and 6.4 × 10−8 mm3/N m, comparable to boundary/mixed lubrication, associated with a high dry frictional power loss of 30 W/mm2. The running-in wear length and, more important, the wear rate decreased under oscillating sliding tests with increasing relative humidity. The contact pressure for high-/low-wear transition increased under oscillating sliding tests with increasing relative humidity. At room temperature and a relative humidity of 100% the steady-state wear rate under dry oscillating sliding for the couple Al2O3/Ti4O7–Ti5O9 was lower than 2 × 10−7 mm3/N m and therefore inferior to the resolution of the continuous wear measurement sensor. TEM of wear tracks from oscillating sliding revealed at room temperature a work-hardening as mechanism to explain the running-in behavior and the high wear resistance. The hydroxylation of titania surfaces favours the high-/low-wear transition. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

13.
Gabi Nehme 《摩擦学汇刊》2013,56(6):977-985
There is recent concern regarding grease behavior in extreme pressure applications. The research described here is aimed at providing good friction and wear performance while optimizing rotational speeds under extreme loading conditions. A design of experiment (DOE) was used to analyze molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) greases and their importance in reducing wear under extreme loading and various speeds conditions (schedule 1 and schedule 2 speeds). The lamellar structure of MoS2 provides very good weld protection by forming a layer that can be easily sheared under the applications of extreme pressures. An extreme load of 785 N was used in conjunction with different schedules of various rotational speeds to examine lithium-based grease with and without MoS2 for an equal number of revolutions. A four-ball wear tester was utilized to run a large number of experiments randomly selected by the DOE software. The grease was heated to 75°C and the wear scar diameters were collected at the end of each test.

The results indicated that wear was largely dependent on the speed condition under extreme pressure loading, and thus a lower MoS2 concentration is needed to improve the wear resistance of lithium-based greases. The response surface diagram showed that the developed molybdenum disulfide greases exhibited both extreme pressure as well as good wear properties under various rotational speeds when compared to steady-state speed. It is believed that MoS2 greases under schedule 1 speeds perform better and provide an antiwear film that can resist extreme pressure loadings.  相似文献   

14.
Laser surface texturing (LST) was performed on the nickel-based composites by a Nd:YAG pulsed laser and the regular-arranged dimples with diameter of 150 μm were fabricated on their surfaces. The textured surfaces were smeared with molybdenum disulfide powder. The tribological properties of the textured and filled composites were investigated by carrying out sliding wear tests against an alumina ball as a counterface using a high temperature ball-on-disk tribometer. The tests were conducted at a sliding speed of 0.4 m/s and at normal loads ranging from 20–100 N and from room temperature to 600 °C. The friction coefficient of nickel-based composite textured and smeared with molybdenum disulfide was found to reduce from 0.18 to 0.1 at the temperature range from 200 to 400 °C. The texture with a dimple density of 7.1% was observed to prolong wear life of MoS2 film by more than four times in comparison to the texture with other dimple densities. The lubricious oxide particles stored in the dimples reduce friction coefficient at elevated temperatures and compensate for the extra lubricant owing to the degradation of MoS2 caused by its oxidation at high temperatures.  相似文献   

15.
A high-temperature self-lubricating composite NiAl–Cr–Mo–CaF2 was fabricated using the powder metallurgy technique, and the tribological behavior of the composite at a wide range of temperatures (room temperature to 1000 °C) was investigated. The results showed that the composite had a favorable friction coefficient of about 0.2 and an excellent wear resistance of about 1 × 10−5 mm3N−1m−1 at the high temperatures tested (800 and 1000 °C). The excellent self-lubricating performance was attributed to the formation of the glaze film on the worn surface consisting mainly of CaCrO4 and CaMoO4 as high-temperature solid lubricants.  相似文献   

16.
Nb1−x Al x N hard coatings were synthesised by cathodic arc-evaporation with different Al contents to study its influence on the tribological properties. Ball-on-disc tests at temperatures up to 700 °C were performed and the recorded coefficient of friction was generally in the range from 0.8 to 1.0. Subsequent analysis of the coating wear track and the counterpart wear scar by optical profilometry and Raman spectroscopy revealed details on the wear behaviour of the tested coatings. The best wear performance for the Nb-rich coatings was in the temperature range of 300–500 °C, whereas at the maximum testing temperature the higher oxidation resistance with increasing Al content was beneficial in terms of wear resistance.  相似文献   

17.
Silver-based composite with 15?vol% MoS2 and with 5?vol% graphite was prepared by powder metallurgy method. The impacts of the counterface materials, atmosphere, and temperature on the tribological behavior of the composite were investigated. It was found that when sliding against brass less effective lubricating film formed, causing a higher friction and wear comparing with ASTM-1045 steel. With the increasing proportion of oxygen in the O2/N2 atmosphere, the wear rate and friction coefficient ascended slightly. At 200?°C, the combination lubrication of graphite, MoS2, and Ag contributed to a low friction coefficient (0.07) and wear rate (6.56?×?10?6?mm3/Nm). At 400?°C, graphite lost its lubricating role, while silver became excessively soft. Large amount of MoS2 was oxidized into MoO3, and the residual MoS2 formed some island-like lubricating films. Severe adhesive wear occurred on the contact surface, which led to a high friction coefficient (0.25) and a great increase of the wear rate (23.2?×?10?6?mm3/Nm). At 600?°C, a relatively low friction coefficient (0.1) was obtained because of the formation of high-temperature solid lubricants, (Ag2Mo4O13 and Ag2Mo2O7) and liquid Ag2Mo2O7. However, the wear rate at 600?°C was the highest (32.6?×?10?6?mm3/Nm) due to the thick transfer layer.  相似文献   

18.
Multilayered MoS2/Sb2O3 thin films were prepared by pulsed laser deposition on steel substrates. A rotary multi-target holder was used to switch the laser targets for alternative growth of MoS2 and Sb2O3 layers providing nanometers thickness. The tribological properties of the films were measured in dry and wet environments and the wear scars were observed using a scanning electron microscope. The multilayer films showed a much longer wear life than pure MoS2 films in wet air tribotests. Focused ion beam and transmission electron microscopies were used to investigate the cross-sectional microstructures of wear scars. Lubricious MoS2/Sb2O3 tribofilms were built up on wear scar surfaces, and produced low friction. Micro-cracks occurred along the interface between the tribofilm and the neighboring/topmost Sb2O3 underlayer, where the Sb2O3 layer effectively inhibited the crack propagation perpendicular to the interface. The orientation of MoS2 crystals in as-deposited films was mostly random and friction-induced stress oriented the MoS2 basal planes parallel to the surface. The reorientation was confined to the topmost MoS2 layer and was not observed below the first intact Sb2O3 layer.  相似文献   

19.
Improving the adhesion and wear endurance lifetimes of the solid lubricant molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) on titanium (Ti) alloys was studied in this experimental investigation. Ti-6Al-4V alloy specimens were implanted with gas ions or coated with ceramic layers prior to coating with sputtered MoS2 to investigate the adhesion and wear lifetimes of the MoS2 coatings. The greatest improvement in scratch adhesion (2.4 times Ti-6Al-4V coated directly with MoS2) was observed for an MoS2/diamond-like carbon/Si multilayer coating. Sliding wear tests revealed the greatest lifetime improvement (3.2 ×) was for an MoS2/TiC dual-layer coating. Increased MoS2 adhesion was observed for pretreated surfaces with a Vickers microhardness greater than 800 kgf/mm2. Increased adhesion of MoS2 for bond layers with lower elastic moduli (estimated) is suggested. Therefore the ratio hardness/elastic modulus may be a potential figure of merit for surface pretreatment selection.  相似文献   

20.
The wear behavior of low-cost, lightweight 10 wt% titanium carbide (TiC)-particulate-reinforced Ti–6Al–4V matrix composite (TiC/Ti–6Al–4V) was examined under fretting at 296, 423, and 523 K in air. Bare 10 wt% TiC/Ti–6Al–4V hemispherical pins were used in contact with dispersed multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWNTs), magnetron-sputtered diamond-like carbon/chromium (DLC/Cr), magnetron-sputtered graphite-like carbon/chromium (GLC/Cr), and magnetron-sputtered molybdenum disulfide/titanium (MoS2/Ti) deposited on Ti–6Al–4V, Ti–48Al–2Cr–2Nb, and nickel-based superalloy 718. When TiC/Ti–6Al–4V was brought into contact with bare Ti–6Al–4V, bare Ti–48Al–2Cr–2Nb, and bare nickel-based superalloy 718, strong adhesion, severe galling, and severe wear occurred. However, when TiC/Ti–6Al–4V was brought into contact with MWNT, DLC/Cr, GLC/Cr, and MoS2/Ti coatings, no galling occurred in the contact, and relatively minor wear was observed regardless of the coating. All the MWNT, DLC/Cr, GLC/Cr, and MoS2/Ti coatings on Ti–6Al–4V were effective from 296 to 523 K, but the effectiveness of the MWNT, DLC/Cr, GLC/Cr, and MoS2/Ti coatings decreased as temperature increased.  相似文献   

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