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1.
The ultra-low friction coefficient (typically in the 10−2 range) of MoS2-based coatings is generally associated with the friction-induced orientation of ‘easy-shear’ planes of the lamellar structure parallel to the sliding direction, particularly in the absence of environmental reactive gases and with moderate normal loads. We used and AES/XPS ultra-high vacuum tribometer coupled to a preparation chamber, thus allowing the deposition of oxygen-free MoS2 PVD coatings and the performance of friction tests in various controlled atmospheres. Friction of oxygen-free stoichiometric MoS2 coatings deposited on AISI 52100 steel was studied in ultra-high vacuum (UHV: 5 × 10−8 Pa), high vacuum (HV: 10−3 Pa), dry nitrogen (105 Pa) and ambient air (105 Pa). ‘Super-low’ friction coefficients below 0.004 were recorded in UHV and dry nitrogen, corresponding to a calculated interfacial shear strength in the range of 1 MPa, about ten times lower than for standard coatings. Low friction coefficients of about 0.013–0.015 were recorded in HV, with interfacial shear strength in the range of 5 MPa. Friction in ambient air leads to higher friction coefficients in the range of 0.2. Surface analysis performed inside the wear scars by Auger electron spectroscopy shows no trace of contaminant, except after friction in ambient air where oxygen and carbon contaminants are observed. In the light of already published results, the ‘super-low’ friction behaviour (10−3 range) can be attributed to superlubricity, obtained for a particular combination of cystallographic orientation and the absence of contaminants, leading to a considerable decrease in the interfacial shear strength.  相似文献   

2.
The fuel economy and reduction of harmful elements of lubricants are becoming important issues in the automotive industry. One approach to these requirements is the potential use of low‐friction coatings in engine components exposed to boundary lubrication conditions. Diamond‐like carbon (DLC) coatings, extensively studied as ultra‐low friction films to protect ductile metals surfaces for space applications, are expected to fit the bill. The main purpose of this work is to investigate the friction and wear properties of DLC coatings lubricated with molybdenum dithiocarbamate (MoDTC) and zinc dithiophosphate (ZDDP) under boundary lubrication conditions. The mechanisms by which MoDTC reduces the friction in the centirange were studied using ultra‐high vacuum (UHV) analytical tribometer. The UHV friction tests were performed on a tribofilm previously formed on selected DLC material with MoDTC and ZDDP containing oil. Ex‐situ characterizations show that the composition of this tribofilm is similar to that of a tribofilm obtained on steel surfaces in the same lubrication conditions with MoS2 single sheets dispersed inside zinc phosphate zones. However, analyses by X‐ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) indicate that MoDTC and ZDDP additives seem to be more active on steel surfaces than carbonaceous ones. After UHV friction with the tribofilm formed on selected DLC and steel pin counterpart, the wear scars of both sliding surfaces were characterized by in‐situ analytical tools such as Auger electron spectroscopy, scanning Auger microscopy and micro‐spot XPS. Low friction is associated with the transfer of a thin MoS2 film to the steel pin counterpart. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

3.
To develop electroconductive and high-endurance solid lubricant nanoperiod multilayer (DLC/Au)n films, diamond-like carbon (DLC) and gold layers were deposited while controlling the time the substrate was exposed graphite and gold targets. The electrical resistivity of the (DLC/Au)n multilayer films was ~12.4 Ω cm. The hardness of the (DLC/Au)n multilayer films was similar to that of DLC films and much higher than that of gold monolayer films. According to the results of oscillating sliding tests under water boundary lubrication and dry conditions, (DLC/Au)n multilayer films exhibited the low friction coefficient, little damage, and high sliding durability than the monolayer films. (DLC/Au)n films also have a lower friction coefficient and exhibit less damage than a Au monolayer under polyalphaolefin boundary lubrication.  相似文献   

4.
The work presents data on friction and wear behaviour of pin-on-disc pairs with superhard diamond-like carbon (DLC) coatings and hard coatings of zirconium nitride (ZrN) and titanium nitride (TiN) in liquid nitrogen with loads of 2.5 and 10 N and sliding speed of 0.06 m/s. It is shown that at cryogenic temperatures the friction coefficients of pairs of two types of DLC coatings obtained by vacuum-arc deposition of filtered high-speed carbon plasma fluxes depend to a great deal on the mechanical properties of the coatings defined by predominant sp2 or sp3 hybridization of valence electrons. A friction coefficient of 0.76 was observed for friction pairs of superhard (90 GPa) DLC coatings having properties similar to those of diamond. For “softer” DLC coatings of 40 GPa and properties similar to those of graphite the friction coefficient shows lower values (0.24–0.48) dependent on normal load and counterbody material. The DLC coatings obtained by the filtered arc technology exhibit good wear resistance and have strong adhesion to the substrate under friction in liquid nitrogen. With a normal load of 10 N under cryogenic temperature a low wear rate (of the order of 7.2×10−4 nm/cycle) was found for superhard DLC coatings. The friction coefficient of pairs with hard ZrN and superhard DLC coatings on steel discs was revealed to be linearly dependent on the counterbody material hardness between 20 and 100 GPa. The hardness of the pin was varied by means of depositing TiN or DLC coatings and also by using high-hardness compounds (boron nitride and synthetic diamond). Proceeding this way can be promising since it offers the possibility of creating low-temperature junctions of required friction properties.  相似文献   

5.
The tribological performance of hydrogenated diamond-like carbon (DLC) coatings is studied by molecular dynamics simulations employing a screened reactive bond-order potential that has been adjusted to reliably describe bond-breaking under shear. Two types of DLC films are grown by CH2 deposition on an amorphous substrate with 45 and 60 eV impact energy resulting in 45 and 30% H content as well as 50 and 30% sp3 hybridization of the final films, respectively. By combining two equivalent realizations for both impact energies, a hydrogen-depleted and a hydrogen-rich tribo-contact is formed and studied for a realistic sliding speed of 20 m s−1 and loads of 1 and 5 GPa. While the hydrogen-rich system shows a pronounced drop of the friction coefficient for both loads, the hydrogen-depleted system exhibits such kind of running-in for 1 GPa, only. Chemical passivation of the DLC/DLC interface explains this running-in behavior. Fluctuations in the friction coefficient occurring at the higher load can be traced back to a cold welding of the DLC/DLC tribo-surfaces, leading to the formation of a transfer film (transferred from one DLC partner to the other) and the establishment of a new tribo-interface with a low friction coefficient. The presence of a hexadecane lubricant leads to low friction coefficients without any running-in for low loads. At 10 GPa load, the lubricant starts to degenerate resulting in enhanced friction.  相似文献   

6.
Genesis of superlow friction and wear in diamondlike carbon films   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Diamondlike carbon (DLC) films offer enormous possibilities for applications that require low friction and high wear resistance. The range of physical, chemical, mechanical, electrical, and optical properties offered by these films is also exceptional and can meet the increasingly multifunctional application needs of machine elements, microelectronics, and biological systems. Since the early 1990s, carbon has been used as a precursor in our laboratory for the design and synthesis of superhard and low-friction carbon films. As a result of systematic studies over the years, in 1997, we developed a new class of DLC films that provide friction and wear coefficients of 0.001–0.005 and 10−10–10−9 mm3/N m, respectively, in inert-gas or vacuum test environments. This paper will mainly concentrate on the tribology of these superlow-friction carbon films and provide an update on our understanding of the fundamental tribological mechanisms of such films. It will also expand on the effects of hydrogen within the films and gaseous species within the test environments on friction and wear.  相似文献   

7.
Friction and wear behaviors of hydrogenated fullerene-like (H-FLC) carbon films sliding against Si3N4 ceramic balls were performed at different contact loads from 1 to 20 N on a reciprocating sliding tribometer in air. It was found that the films exhibited non-Amontonian friction behaviors, the coefficient of friction (COF) decreased with normal contact load increasing: the COF was ~0.112 at 1 N contact load, and deceased to ultralow value (~0.009) at 20 N load. The main mechanism responsible for low friction and wear under varying contact pressure is governed by hydrogenated carbon transfer film that formed and resided at the sliding interfaces. In addition, the unique fullerene-like structures induce well elastic property of the H-FLC films (elastic recovery 78%), which benefits the high load tolerance and induces the low wear rate in air condition. For the film with an ultralow COF of 0.009 tested under 20 N load in air, time of flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS) signals collected inside and outside the wear tracks indicated the presence of C2H3 and C2H5 fragments after tribological tests on the H-FLC films surface. We think that the tribochemistry and elastic property of the H-FLC films is responsible for the observed friction behaviors, the high load tolerance, and chemical inertness of hydrogenated carbon-containing transfer films instead of the graphitization of transfer films is responsible for the steady-state low coefficients of friction, wear, and interfacial shear stress.  相似文献   

8.
DLC solid lubricant coatings on ball bearings for space applications   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
The environment of space offers special challenges for the lubrication of components in sliding and rolling mechanisms. Hydrogenated diamond-like carbon (DLC) films are being studied as solid lubricant coatings to simultaneously fulfil specifications regarding wear resistance and low friction behaviour under ambient atmosphere and in vacuum.In this paper, the tribological behaviour of highly hydrogenated DLC coatings (50 at% hydrogen) is assessed. Coating composition was optimised on flat AISI 52100 steel substrates based on ball-on-disc tribotest results in air, vacuum and dry nitrogen environments. The developed DLC coatings can be tailored to yield ultra-low friction values in vacuum (μ=0.008). The average friction coefficient range obtained in humid air, dry nitrogen and vacuum for the range of applied loads were, respectively, 0.22 to 0.27, 0.02 to 0.03, and 0.007 to 0.013.New in this work is that optimised DLC coatings were applied to ball bearings for space applications. The torque and life tests of coated pairs of angular contact bearings in air revealed that relatively high bearing torques are generated which increase with time, but the amount of coating wear generated during in-air operation appears relatively light. In vacuum, low torques are generated after a prolonged running-in period. Low-torque life exceeds that observed for MoS2 by a factor of about two. It is concluded that, in contrast to MoS2 coated bearings, DLC-coated bearings for space applications might therefore be capable of undergoing in-air ground testing without too much disruption of the subsequent in-space performance.  相似文献   

9.
We have investigated environmental effects on hydrogenated diamond-like carbon (H-DLC) films under various pressures of H2O, O2, and N2 by ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) tribometry. The H-DLC film exhibits an ultralow coefficient of friction (μ = 0.004 in UHV). The μ value increases with increasing pressure of H2O and O2. Specifically, μ increases up to 0.07 under 10 Torr of H2O, and up to 0.03 under 150 Torr of O2; these are typical H2O and O2 contents respectively in ambient air. Our results are consistent with similar environmental effects previously reported. But, we have also discovered that these friction changes are reversible, returning to the ultralow value when UHV is restored. The reversibility of the friction behavior in both environments, coupled with the lack of evidence of tribochemical changes by Auger electron spectroscopy, suggest that the observed friction changes are due to the weakly adsorbed gas molecules that influence the friction property by physically separating the H-DLC interface. Speed-dependent tribometry also supports this argument. In addition, two DLC films with different hydrogen contents and with widely different friction coefficients in UHV are shown to exhibit identical μ values under humid environments, further demonstrating that the frictional properties of these DLC films are essentially determined by the surface layer of adsorbed gas molecules.  相似文献   

10.
The role of hydrogen on the friction mechanism of diamond-like carbon films   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Donnet  C.  Fontaine  J.  Grill  A.  Le Mogne  T. 《Tribology Letters》2001,9(3-4):137-142
The structure, properties and tribological behavior of DLC films are dependent on the deposition process, the hydrogen concentration and chemical bondings in the films. The present paper reports selected tribological experiments on model DLC films with different hydrogen contents. The experiments were performed in ultrahigh vacuum or in an atmosphere of pure hydrogen or argon in order to elucidate various friction mechanisms. Two typical friction regimes are identified. High steady-state friction in UHV (friction coefficient of 0.6) is observed for the lowest hydrogenated and mostly sp2-bonded DLC film. Superlow steady-state friction (friction coefficient in the millirange) is observed both for the highest hydrogenated film in UHV, and for the lowest hydrogenated film in an atmosphere of hydrogen (10 hPa). The high steady-state friction in UHV, observed for the lowest hydrogenated film with a dominant sp2 carbon hybridization, is associated with a –* sub-band overlap responsible for an increased across-the-plane chemical bonding with a high shear strength similar to what is observed with unintercalated graphite in the same UHV conditions. Superlow friction is correlated with a hydrogen saturation across the shearing plane through weak van der Waals interactions between the polymer-like hydrocarbon top layers. This regime is observed during the steady-state period if the film contains enough hydrogen incorporated during deposition. If this condition is not satisfied (i.e., for the film with the lowest hydrogen content), the limited diffusion of hydrogen from the film network towards the sliding surfaces seems to be responsible for a superlow running-in period. The superlow friction level can be reached over longer time periods by suitable combinations of temperature and molecular hydrogen present in the surrounding atmosphere during friction.  相似文献   

11.
The chemical structure and tribological behaviour of Ti–6Al–4V plasma source ion implanted with nitrogen then DLC-coated in an acetylene plus hydrogen-glow discharge (bias voltage −10 to −30 kV) were investigated. The as-modified samples have a TiN/H:DLC multilayer architecture (coating resistivity 1.6×109 to 2.4×1011 Ω/cm) and exhibit higher hardness, especially at low loads or plastic penetrations in the order of deposition bias voltage −10, −20 and −30 kV. At a lower contact load (1 N) and higher sliding speed (0.05 m/s), frictional properties in most cases improved, as did wear properties. At a higher contact load (5 N) and lower sliding speed (0.04 m/s), friction showed almost no improvement, and wear properties deteriorated. When the material of the counterbody was then changed from AISI 52100 to Ti–6Al–4V modified as the disc (contact load 5 N unchanged, sliding speed decreased), the friction coefficient decreased (but showed no improvement compared with the unmodified sample), while wear properties deteriorated further, and wear was changed from just the disc to both disc and ball, abrasive and adhesive dominated. Transfer films, mainly made up of wear debris transferred from the disc wear surfaces, were formed on the wear scars of the counterbodies. The deterioration of wear properties of the modified samples at the higher contact load is considered to be caused by the “thin ice” effect.  相似文献   

12.
Three types of diamond-like carbon (DLC) films, pure DLC, F-containing DLC, and a Si-containing DLC film, were deposited on a WC–Co substrate by a plasma-enhanced CVD technique. Friction and wear properties were determined using a ball-on-plate type reciprocating friction tester in water, comparing the water results to those in ambient air. The friction coefficient of DLC and F–DLC films in water was considerably lower than that in air. With Si–DLC, the friction was almost the same level in both water and air, and was less than 0.1. The specific wear rate of films in water was much smaller than that in air and varied around the low level of 10–8 mm3/Nm in water, The mating ball wear was also less than 10–8 mm3/Nm. With DLC and F–DLC films, the transferred amount of material on the friction surface of a mating ball was larger in a water environment than that in air. With a Si–DLC film, the difference in the transferred amount when exposed to either the water or air environment was negligible.  相似文献   

13.
The potential of coatings to protect components against wear and to reduce friction has led to a large variety of protective coatings. In order to check the success of coating modifications and to find solutions for different purposes, initial tests with laboratory tribometers are usually done to give information about the performance of a coating. Different Ti‐based coatings (TiN, Ti(C,N), and TiAlN) and NiP were tested in comparison to coatings with an additional diamond‐like carbon (DLC) top coating. Tests were done in laboratory air at room temperature with oscillating sliding (gross slip fretting) with a ball‐on‐disc arrangement against a ceramic ball (Al2O3). Special attention was paid to possible effects of moisture (relative humidity). The coefficient of friction was measured on line, and the volumetric wear at the disc was determined after the test from microscopic measurements of the wear scar and additional profiles. The friction and wear behaviour is quite different for the different coatings and depends more or less on the relative humidity. The DLC coating on top of the other coatings reduces friction and wear considerably. In normal and in moist air the coefficient of wear of the DLC top‐layer coating is significantly less than 10−6 mm3/Nm and the coefficient of friction is below 0.1. In dry air, however, there is a certain tendency to high wear and high friction. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

14.
Tribological properties of three-phase composite coatings consisting of nanocrystalline WC, amorphous diamond-like carbon (DLC), and nanocrystalline WS2 are evaluated. The WC/DLC/WS2 coatings have 0.5 μm thickness, 7–8 GPa hardness, excellent wear resistance, and low friction coefficients: 0.03 in vacuum, and 0.15 in air; with unique friction recovery in cycling between dry and moist environments. The benefits of carbide/dichalcogenide/DLC nanocomposites for aerospace tribology are highlighted. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

15.
Polyimide cylinders are slid under 50 N normal load and 0.3 m/s sliding velocity against carbon steel (Ra=0.2 and 0.05 μm), high-alloy steel (Ra=0.05 μm), diamond-like carbon (DLC, Ra=0.05 μm) and diamond-like nanocomposite (DLN, Ra=0.05 μm). Only for a limited range of test parameters, the friction of polyimide/DLN is lower than for polyimide/steel, while polyimide shows higher wear rates after sliding against DLN compared to steel counterfaces. The DLN coating shows slight wear scratches, although less severe than on DLC-coatings that are worn through thermal degradation. Therefore, also friction against DLC-coatings is high and unstable. Calculated bulk temperatures for steel and DLN under mild sliding conditions remain below the polyimide transition temperature of 180 °C so that other surface characteristics explain low friction on DLN counterfaces, as surface energy, structural compatibility and transfer behaviour. Friction is initially determined through adhesion and it is demonstrated that higher surface energy provides higher friction. After certain sliding time, different polyimide transfer on each counterface governs the tribological performance. Polyimide and amorphous DLC structures are characterised by C–C bonds, showing high structural compatibility and easy adherence of wear debris on the coating. However, it consists of plate-like transfer particles that act as abrasives and deteriorate the polyimide wear resistance. In sliding experiments with high-alloy steel, wear debris is washed out of the contact zone without formation of a transfer film. Transfer consists of island-like particles for smooth carbon steel and it forms a more homogeneous transfer film on rough carbon steel. The latter thick and protective film is favourable for low wear rates; however, it causes higher friction than smooth counterfaces.  相似文献   

16.
Miyoshi  K.  Wu  R.L.C.  Lanter  W.C. 《Tribology Letters》1997,3(2):141-145
Friction and wear behavior of ion-beam-deposited diamondlikecarbon (DLC) films coated on chemical-vapor-deposited (CVD),fine-grain diamond coatings were examined in ultrahigh vacuum,dry nitrogen, and humid air environments. The DLC films wereproduced by the direct impact of an ion beam (composed of a 3 :17 mixture of Ar and CH4) at ion energies of 1500 and700 eV. Sliding friction experiments were conducted withhemispherical CVD diamond pins sliding on four differentcarbon-base coating systems: DLC films on CVD diamond; DLC filmson silicon; as-deposited, fine-grain CVD diamond; andcarbon-ion-implanted, fine-grain CVD diamond on silicon. Resultsindicate that in ultrahigh vacuum theion-beam-deposited DLC films on fine-grain CVD diamond (similarto the ion-implanted CVD diamond) greatly decrease both thefriction and wear of fine-grain CVD diamond films and providesolid lubrication. In dry nitrogen and in humid air,ion-beam-deposited DLC films on fine-grain CVD diamond films alsohad a lowsteady-state coefficient of friction and a low wear rate. Thesetribological performance benefits, coupled with a wider range ofcoating thicknesses, led to longer endurance life and improvedwear resistance for the DLC deposited on fine-grain CVD diamondin comparison to the ion-implanted diamond films. Thus, DLCdeposited on fine-grain CVD diamond films can be an effectivewear-resistant, lubricating coating regardless of environment.  相似文献   

17.
K.Y. Li  Z.F. Zhou  I. Bello  S.T. Lee 《Wear》2005,258(10):1577-1588
Diamond-like carbon (DLC) coatings were prepared on AISI 440C steel substrates at room temperature by electron cyclotron resonance chemical vapor deposition (ECR-CVD) process in C2H2/Ar plasma. Using the designed Ti/TiN/TiCN/TiC interfacial transition layers, relatively thick DLC coatings (1-2 μm) were successfully prepared on the steel substrates. The friction and wear performance of the DLC coatings was evaluated by ball-on-disk tribometry using a steel counterbody at various normal loads (1-10 N) and sliding speeds (2-15 cm/s). By optimizing the deposition parameters such as negative bias voltage, DLC coatings with hardness up to 30 GPa and friction coefficients lower than 0.15 against the 100Cr6 steel ball could be obtained. The friction coefficient was maintained for 100,000 cycles (∼2.2 km) of dry sliding in ambient environments. In addition, the specific wear rates of the coatings were found to be extremely low (∼10−8 mm3/Nm); at the same time, the ball wear rates were one order of magnitude lower. The influences of the processing parameters and the sliding conditions were determined, and the frictional behavior of the coatings was discussed. It has been found that higher normal loads or sliding speeds reduced the wear rates of the coatings. Therefore, it is feasible to prepare hard and highly adherent DLC coatings with low friction coefficient and low wear rate on engineering steel substrates by the ECR-CVD process. The excellent tribological performance of DLC coatings enables their industrial applications as wear-resistant solid lubricants on sliding parts.  相似文献   

18.
The friction of diamond and diamond-like carbon (DLC) materials was evaluated in reciprocating sliding wear testing under controlled relative humidity. The testing conditions were a displacement stroke of 100 μm, an oscillatory frequency of 8 Hz and a normal load of 2 N. The coefficient of friction of diamond and hydrogen-free DLC (a-C) coatings against a corundum sphere in the steady regime decreased with an increase in relative humidity. A water layer physisorbed at the interface between the mating surfaces played two major roles: acting as a lubricant and increasing the true area of contact. However, it was noticed that the friction coefficient of the hydrogenated DLC (a-C:H) coatings first increased and then decreased with increasing relative humidity in the steady state. There appeared to be a critical relative humidity for the a-C:H coatings, at which the steady-state friction reached the maximum value. The frictional behaviour of the a-C:H coatings also showed dependence on the wear test duration. The interaction between hydrogen and oxygen at the interface between the a-C:H coating and water layer was mainly responsible for such behaviour.  相似文献   

19.
This article deals with the tribology of lipid coatings that resemble those found on human skin. In order to simulate the lipidic surface chemistry of human skin, an artificial sebum formulation that closely resembles human sebum was spray-coated onto mechanical skin models in physiologically relevant concentrations (5–100 μg/cm2). Water contact angles and surface free energies (SFEs) showed that model surfaces with ≤25 μg/cm2 lipids appropriately mimic the physico-chemical properties of dry, sebum-poor skin regions. In friction experiments with a steel ball, lipid-coated model surfaces demonstrated lubrication effects over a wide range of sliding velocities and normal loads. In friction measurements on model surfaces as a function of lipid-film thickness, a clear minimum in the friction coefficient (COF) was observed in the case of hydrophilic, high-SFE materials (steel, glass), with the lowest COF (≈0.5) against skin model surfaces being found at 25 μg/cm2 lipids. For hydrophobic, low-SFE polymers, the COF was considerably lower (0.4 for PP, 0.16 for PTFE) and relatively independent of the lipid amount, indicating that both the mechanical and surface-chemical properties of the sliders strongly influence the friction behaviour of the skin-model surfaces. Lipid-coated skin models might be a valuable tool not only for tribologists but also for cosmetic chemists, in that they allow the objective study of friction, adhesion and wetting behaviour of liquids and emulsions on simulated skin-surface conditions.  相似文献   

20.
In the present study, the sliding wear behavior of pulse-electrodeposited multilayer Ni-Fe coatings as a function of pulse parameters including frequency and duty cycle has been studied using pin-on-disc tests against an Al2O3 counterbody. Sliding wear was investigated with respect to the coefficient of friction (COF), worn surfaces, wear rate, and wear debris. The results of COF with sliding distance revealed a two-region state. At the start of the test the COF was higher, which was due to high stress at the contact region and the occurrence of delamination wear. Then the COF was collapsed as a result of pin penetration and decreased stress at the contact region. The intensity of delamination is decreased at the later stage. The wear resistance of multilayer coatings is increased with increasing frequency and decreasing duty cycles as a consequence of grain refinement and hardness enhancement.  相似文献   

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