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1.
Graphite-fiber-reinforced polyimide (GFRPI) composites were formulated form three new partially fluorinated polyimides and three types of graphite fiber. Nine composites were molded into pins and evaluated in a pin-on-disk tribometer. Friction coefficients, wear rates, pin wear surface morphology, and transfer film formation were assessed at 25 and 300°C. Also assessed was the effect of sliding distance on friction and the effect of constantly increasing or decreasing temperature on friction. Wear was up to two orders of magnitude lower at 25°C and up to one order of magnitude lower at 300°C than with previously formulated NASA GFRPI composites.  相似文献   

2.
Thermal exposure experiments at 315° and 350°C were conducted on seven different types of polyimide film to determine which was the most thermally stable and adherent. The polyimides were ranked according to the rate of which they lost weight and how well they adhered to the metallic substrate. Friction and wear experiments were conducted at 25°C (room temperature) on films bonded to 440C HT stainless steel. Friction, film wear rates, wear mechanists, and transfer films of the seven films were investigated and compared. The polyimides were found to fall into two groups as far as friction and wear properties were concerned. Group I had lower friction but an order of magnitude higher film wear rate than did group II. The wear mechanism was predominately adhesive, but the size of the wear particles was larger for group I polyimides.  相似文献   

3.
The formation of antiwear tribofilms plays a critical role in the longevity of automotive gears. The focus of this experimental study was on the lubrication efficacy of gear oils with different contents of borate-, phosphorus-, and sulfur-containing additives leading to the formation of protective tribofilms. Experiments were performed with AISI 52100 steel balls sliding against AISI 52100 steel disks in baths of different oils at ambient (~32 °C) and elevated (~100 °C) temperatures under load and speed conditions favoring sliding in the boundary lubrication regime. Friction coefficient responses accompanied by electrical contact voltage measurements provided real-time information about the formation and durability of the antiwear tribofilms. The wear resistance of the tribochemical films was quantified by wear rate data obtained from surface profilometry measurements of wear tracks on the disk specimens and sliding tests performed at ambient temperatures after the formation of the tribofilms during elevated-temperature sliding. Results indicate a strong dependence of tribofilm formation on temperature and type of additives. The slightly lower friction and higher wear resistance obtained at elevated temperatures with blended oils is attributed to the increased chemical reactivity of additives containing borate, phosphorus, and sulfur, leading to the formation of durable tribofilms. Relatively higher wear resistance and faster tribofilm formation were obtained with the borate-enriched gear oil formulations.  相似文献   

4.
In this study, we investigated the effect of temperature on the friction and wear of rice bran (RB) ceramics, a hard porous carbon material made from rice bran, sliding against alumina, stainless steel, and bearing steel balls under dry conditions. Friction tests were performed using a ball-on-disk-type friction tester wherein a ceramic heater was installed in the rotational stage. The surface temperature of the RB ceramic disk specimens was controlled at 20, 100, 150, or 200°C. The normal load was 1.96 N, sliding velocity was 0.1 m/s, and number of cycles was 20,000. The effect of surface temperature on the friction and wear of RB ceramics substantially differed among the ball material types. The friction coefficient for the RB ceramics sliding against an alumina ball decreased with increasing temperature and exhibited an extremely low value (0.045) at 200°C. The friction coefficient in the case of the RB ceramics sliding against a stainless steel ball exhibited a stable value as the temperature was increased to 150°C and slightly decreased as the temperature was increased further, reaching a low value of 0.122 at 200°C. The friction coefficient for the RB ceramics sliding against bearing steel ball drastically increased with increasing temperature, reaching 0.381 at 200°C. The specific wear rate of the RB ceramics increased with increasing temperature; it was lowest when sliding against alumina and highest when sliding against bearing steel. The wear of the alumina ball was the lowest and that of the bearing steel ball was the highest under all investigated temperature conditions. On the basis of these results, we concluded that alumina is a promising counterpart material for RB ceramics sliding at high temperatures (≤200°C).  相似文献   

5.
The tribological behaviour of different monolithic and composite ceramics was evaluated in the temperature range between room temperature and 750°C. The test method was oscillating sliding with a ball‐on‐disk arrangement in an SRV machine. Alumina balls were used as counter body. The friction behaviour was determined on‐line, and the wear behaviour was determined from calculations on the basis of wear scar dimensions and profilometric measurements. The friction depends on temperature and shows an increase for most materials for increasing temperature; the smallest friction at all temperatures is found for monolithic TiC. The wear behaviour shows different trends for the different materials. In tests against SiC a maximum of wear is found at 500°C, for TiC at 200°C and for TiB2 at 750°C. The composite ceramics suffer the smallest wear of all materials in the range from 200°C to 500°C. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

6.
Semi-interpenetrating network composites containing 40 vol.% ceramics (5Al2O3·8SiO2) and 60 vol.% Al-alloy were fabricated in place of cast iron available for automotive brake rotors. The friction and wear performances of brake pads dry sliding against the composites were measured using a SRV testing machine. The test procedures include friction fade and recovery, load sensitivity at 100 and 250°C, and wear. The friction was found to increase first and then decrease with increasing temperature, followed by the inverse recovery upon cooling. Wear showed an incremental tendency over a wide temperature range. For loads from 40 to 160 N, the friction decreased at 100 and 250°C. At load below 128 N, the former friction was inferior to the latter while at load above 128 N the friction exhibited an inverse tendency. Wear mildly increased with load at 100 °C and decreased dramatically at 250 °C. SEM and EDS investigations revealed that the worn pad surfaces at 250 °C were covered by more tribofilms, including more coke and graphite with friction-reducing action as well as fewer compounds (corresponding to Si and Al) with friction-increasing action in comparison with those at 100 °C. The compression of the tribofilms contributed to a large decrease in the friction and wear with increasing load. However, at 100 °C E-glass fibers exposed at the worn surfaces inhibited the excessive wear of the pad despite lack of more tribofilms. Their glossy surfaces decreased the friction. The proposed friction models explain some friction and wear behaviour better.  相似文献   

7.
Dry sliding wear tests were performed for 3Cr13 steel with various tempered states at 25–400°C; wear and friction characteristics as well as the wear mechanism were explored. With an increase in test temperature, the wear rate decreased accompanied by an increase in tribo-oxides. The fluctuation of friction coefficient was slight at 25–200°C but became violent at 400°C. At 25–200°C, adhesive wear prevailed due to trace or less tribo-oxides; at 400°C, oxidative wear prevailed with the predominant tribo-oxides of Fe3O4 and Fe2O3. It can be suggested that the antioxidation of the stainless steel postponed the occurrence of oxidative wear to a higher test temperature. For adhesive wear, the wear resistance, roughly following Archard's rule, was directly proportional to hardness besides the specimen tempered at 500°C with grain boundary brittleness. But for elevated-temperature wear, a better wear resistance required thermal stability and an appropriate combination of hardness and toughness.  相似文献   

8.
A sputter-deposited bilayer coating of gold and chromium was investigated as a potential solid lubricant to protect alumina substrates in applications involving sliding at high temperatures. The lubricant was tested in a pin-on-disk tribometer with coated alumina disks sliding against uncoated alumina pins. Three test parameters—temperature, load and sliding velocity—were varied over a wide range in order to determine the performance envelope of the Au/Cr solid lubricant film. The tribo-tests were run in air at temperatures of 25° to 1000°C, under loads of 4.9 to 49.0 N and at sliding velocities from 1 to 15 ms?1. Posttest analyses included surface profilometry, wear factor determination and SEM/EDS examination of worn surfaces.

Compared to unlubricaled Al2O3 sliding, the use of the Au/Cr film reduced friction by 30 to 50 percent and wear by one to two orders of magnitude. Increases in test temperature resulted in lower friction and the Au/Cr film continued to provide low friction, about 0.3, even at 1000°C. Pin wear factors and friction were largely unaffected by increasing loads up to 29.4 N. Sliding velocity had essentially no effect on friction, however, increased velocity reduced coaling life (total sliding distance). Based upon these research results, the Au/Cr film is a promising lubricant for moderately loaded, low-speed applications operating at temperatures as high as 1000°C.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of temperature and sliding distance on the metal-to-metal wear behavior of austenitic Fe-20Cr-1.7C-1Si hardfacing alloy were investigated in air in the temperature range from 25 to 450 °C. The applied contact stress was 55 MPa and the maximum sliding distance was 18 m. In the temperature range from 25 to 200 °C, the weight loss increased linearly with increasing sliding distance. The weight loss increased parabolically with increasing sliding distance up to 18 m at 300 °C, but at 450 °C, the weight loss drastically increased from the beginning of the wear test and became almost saturated above a sliding distance of 3.6 m. The initial friction coefficient was not changed with temperature up to 300 °C. However, at 450 °C, the initial friction coefficient increased abruptly. It was thought to be due to the increasing tendency of adhesive bonding to occur between the two self-mating specimens. At temperatures below 200 °C, the steady state friction coefficient did not change significantly. Above 300 °C, the steady state friction coefficient decreased due to the oxide layers that formed on the worn surfaces during wear.  相似文献   

10.
Nano Au-TiO2 composite thin films on Si(1 0 0) and glass substrates were successfully prepared with a facile sol-gel process followed by sintering. The morphology and mircostructure of the films were investigated via X-ray diffractometry (XRD), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), atomic force microscopy (AFM), and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The Au particles, of diameter 14-22 nm depending on the sintering temperatures used, were found to be well dispersed in the TiO2 matrix, with a small amount of the particles escaped from the film. The surfaces of the films were uniform, compact and crack-free. Hardness and elastic modulus of the films were measured by using the nanoindentation technique. Friction and wear properties were investigated by using a one-way reciprocating tribometer. It was found that the highest hardness and elastic modulus values were obtained for the films prepared with 500 °C sintering temperature. The films displayed superior antiwear and friction reduction performances in sliding against an AISI 52100 steel ball. With 5.0 mol% Au, the friction coefficient was only 0.09-0.10 and the wear life was more than 2000 sliding cycles. The friction coefficient and wear life decreased with increasing sliding speed and load. The failure mechanism of the Au-TiO2 films was identified to be light scuffing and abrasion. Those films can be potentially applied as ultra-thin lubricating coatings.  相似文献   

11.
The tribological behaviour and surface interactions of titanium sliding against AISI 52100 steel have been studied at 200 and 300 °C in the presence of two commercial imidazolium room temperature ionic liquid (ILs): 1-octyl-3-methylimidazolium tetrafluoroborate (L108) and 1-hexyl-3-methylimidazolium hexafluorophosphate (LP106). L108 presents the higher thermal stability but gives higher friction coefficients and wear rates than LP106, with long running-in periods and high friction values, both at 200 and 300 °C. Friction and wear rates for LP106 are lower and decrease as the temperature increases from 25 to 200 °C. At 200 °C, LP106 shows a constant friction coefficient, without running-in, produces a mild wear on titanium and no surface damage on steel. LP106 fails at 300 °C, close to its degradation temperature, due to tribochemical decomposition through partial dissociation of the hexafluorophosphate anion, with formation of a phosphorus-rich layer on the steel ball, while the titanium wear track surface is heterogeneous, showing regions with the presence of fluoride and others with the presence of phosphate. When the steel ball is substituted for a ruby sphere under the same conditions at 300 °C, a low friction coefficient and mild wear is observed, due to the higher stability of the LP106 lubricant at the ruby–titanium interface. The friction coefficients, wear mechanisms and surface interactions have been studied by means of friction-distance records, SEM, EDX and XPS.  相似文献   

12.
The tribological behavior of self-mated Ti3SiC2 is investigated from ambient temperature to 800?°C at a sliding speed of 0.01?m/s in air. The results show that at the temperatures lower than 300?°C, friction coefficient and wear rates are as high as 0.95 and 10?3?mm3/N?m, respectively. With the temperature increasing to 600?°C, both the friction coefficient and wear rates show consecutive decrease. At 700 and 800?°C, friction coefficient and wear rates are 0.5 and 10?6 mm3/N?m, respectively. According to the wear mechanism, the tribological behavior of Ti3SiC2 can be divided into three regimes: mechanical wear-dominated regime from ambient temperature to 300?°C characterized by pullout of grains; mixed wear regime (mechanical wear and oxidation wear) from 400 to 600?°C; and tribo-oxidation-dominated wear regime above 700?°C. The tribo-oxides on the worn surfaces involve oxides of Si and Ti. And, species transformation occurs to these two oxides with the increasing temperature. In the competition oxidation of elements Ti and Si, Si is preferably oxidized because of its high active position in the crystal structure. Additionally, plastic flow is another notable characteristic for the tribological behavior of self-mated Ti3SiC2.  相似文献   

13.
In this article, friction and wear characteristics of BaCr2O4 ceramics have been investigated using a high-temperature friction and wear tester from room temperature to 800?°C in dry sliding against sintered alumina ball. At room temperature, the friction coefficient and wear rate of BaCr2O4 ceramics are quite high. BaCr2O4 ceramics exhibit low friction coefficients and small wear rates with temperature increasing up to 400?C600?°C. The oxidation reaction of BaCr2O4 during high-temperature wear tests is responsible for the tribological properties. The oxidized product of BaCr2O4 is BaCrO4, which forms a smooth self-lubricating film on the worn surface to effectively reduce friction and wear. However, at 800?°C, severe oxidation reduces the relative density of sintered BaCr2O4 ceramics, and further expedites the materials removal process.  相似文献   

14.
Jianliang Li  Dangsheng Xiong 《Wear》2009,266(1-2):360-367
Nickel-based graphite-containing composites were prepared by powder metallurgy method. Their mechanical properties at room temperature and friction and wear properties from room temperature to 600 °C were investigated by a pin-on-disk tribometer with alumina, silicon nitride and nickel-based alloy as counterfaces. The effects of graphite addition amount, temperature, load, sliding speed and counterface materials on the tribological properties were discussed. The micro-structure and worn surface morphologies were analyzed by scanning electron microscope (SEM) attached with energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS). The results show that the composites are mainly consisted of nickel-based solid solution, free graphite and carbide formed during hot pressing. The friction and wear properties of composites are all improved by adding 6–12 wt.% graphite while the anti-bending and tensile strength as well as hardness decrease after adding graphite. The friction coefficients from room temperature to 600 °C decrease with the increase of load, sliding speed while the wear rates increase with the increasing temperature, sliding speed. The lower friction coefficients and wear rates are obtained when the composite rubs against nickel-based alloy containing molybdenum disulfide. Friction coefficients of graphite-containing composites from room temperature to 600 °C are about 0.4 while wear rates are in the magnitude of 10?5 mm3/(N m). At high temperature, the graphite is not effective in lubrication due to the oxidation and the shield of ‘glaze’ layer formed by compacting back-transferred wear particles. EDS analysis of worn surface shows that the oxides of nickel and molybdenum play the main role of lubrication instead of graphite at the temperature above 400 °C.  相似文献   

15.
In the present study, hybrid friction materials were manufactured using ceramic and basalt fibers. Ceramic fiber content was kept constant at 10 vol% and basalt fiber content was changed between 0 to 40 vol%. Mechanical properties and friction and wear characteristics of friction materials were determined using a pin-on-disc type apparatus against a cast iron counterface in the sliding speeds of 3.2–12.8 m/s, disc temperature of 100–350 °C and applied loads of 312.5–625 N. The worn surfaces of the specimens were examined by SEM. Experiments show that fiber content has a significant influence on the mechanical and tribological properties of the composites. The friction coefficient of the hybrid friction materials was increased with increasing additional basalt fiber content. But the specific wear rates of the composites decreased up to 30 vol% fiber content and then increased again above this value. The wear tests showed that the coefficient of friction decreases with increasing load and speed but increases with increasing disc temperature up to 300 °C. The most important factor effecting wear rate was the disc temperature followed by sliding speed. The materials showing higher specific wear rates gave relatively coarser wear particles. XRD studies showed that Fe and Fe2O3 were present in wear debris at severe wear conditions which is indicating the disc wear.  相似文献   

16.
(TiB2–TiC)–Ni/TiAl/Ti functionally gradient materials were prepared by field-activated pressure-assisted synthesis processes. (TiB2–TiC)–Ni composite ceramic, the top layer of the functional gradient materials, was prepared in situ by the combustion synthesis process using Ti and B4C powders as raw materials. Scanning electron microscope (SEM) images of the ceramic layer revealed that the TiB2 and TiC particles in the composite were fine and homogeneously dispersed in the Ni matrix. The friction and wear properties of the (TiB2–TiC)–Ni ceramic were evaluated by sliding against a GCr15 disk at temperatures from ambient up to 400 °C. The experimental results showed that the friction coefficient of the (TiB2–TiC)–Ni ceramic decreased with the increasing testing temperature, load, and sliding speed. However, the loss rate decreased at higher temperature and increased at higher load and higher sliding speed. The wear mechanisms of (TiB2–TiC)–Ni ceramic mainly depend upon thermal oxidation at higher temperature, load, and sliding speed. The worn topography and phase component of the worn surfaces were analyzed using SEM, energy dispersive spectroscopy, and X-ray diffraction. The oxide films of Fe2O3, TiO2, and B2O3 formed during the friction process play an important role in lubrication, which results in a smaller friction coefficient.  相似文献   

17.
《Wear》1996,193(2):253-260
The friction and wear behavior of sliding bearings made from high temperature thermoplastics was investigated to determine the possibility of dry sliding applications. A test apparatus for plain bearing testing was designed and built to enable load, speed, and temperature to be controlled and temperature, friction and wear to be continuously monitored.Bulk material bearings (polyaryletherketone-based composites and neat polybenzimidazole) and metal-thermoplastic compound bearings with a sliding layer of polyetheretherketone were investigated. Their suitability for dry sliding bearing applications was assessed using the values of friction coefficient, wear rate and friction induced temperature.In general, the operating performance is mainly influenced by the operating conditions and the precise construction of the bearing. A fiber reinforcement of the thermoplastic matrix is necessary at high loads, whereas it is unnecessary at low loads. A further increase of the operational limits is made possible by improving the heat conduction from the contact area, as comparison with results of pin-on-disk investigations indicates. The materials tested provide operation of dry sliding bearings to temperatures over 200°C.  相似文献   

18.
Adequate high-temperature lubrication between loaded surfaces in sliding contact can be one of the most challenging tribological problems confronting today's designers. In an attempt to provide a possible solution a test program was initiated to evaluate PS400, a recently patented, high-temperature solid lubricant coating. Made from nickel–molybdenum–aluminum, chrome oxide, silver, and barium fluoride–calcium fluoride, PS400 is a variant of the earlier coating, PS304, but is formulated for higher density, smoother surface texture, and greater dimensional stability. It was initially developed to minimize the start–stop wear in foil air bearings but is expected to perform well in other high-temperature applications where sliding friction and wear are a concern, such as variable inlet guide vanes and process control valve stems. To better define its operational capabilities, a series of tests was conducted to study the behavior of PS400 under reciprocating sliding contact at temperatures from 260 to 927°C. The tests were performed on stationary, uncoated cobalt-based superalloy bushings loaded against reciprocating PS400-coated shaft specimens in a flat-on-cylinder configuration at Hertz contact pressures from 14.1 to 20.1 MPa. For tests conducted below 927°C, friction coefficients ranged from 0.37 to 0.84 with wear factors on the order of 10?5 and 10?6 at the high temperatures but substantially increased at the lowest temperature. Data collected at 927°C were limited because the coating was found to be dimensionally unstable at this temperature.  相似文献   

19.
Friction and wear behaviors of hydrogenated amorphous carbon (a-C:H) and hydrogen-free amorphous carbon (a-C) films sliding against Si3N4 balls were investigated in different testing environments. The result showed that two films with extreme chemical disparity (one hydrogenated, and the other hydrogen free) showed distinct different friction and wear behaviors, and the friction and wear behaviors of the both films were strongly dependent on the environment. For a-C:H films, much low friction coefficient and wear rate were obtain in dry N2. In the water and/or oxygen containing environments, the friction coefficient and wear rate of a-C:H films were obviously increased. On the contrary, a-C films only provided low friction coefficient and wear rate in the presence of water and/or oxygen in the test chamber. In dry N2, the highest friction coefficient and wear rate were observed for a-C films. By investigating the worn surfaces of the films using XPS, it was proposed that the environment dependence of the friction and wear behaviors of the films was closely related with the friction-induced chemical interactions between the films and water and/or oxygen molecules. The specific roles of hydrogen, water and oxygen molecules and their tribochemical effects on the friction and wear mechanism of the films are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
The friction and wear of short glass fiber reinforced polyamide 12 (PA12) were investigated. The behavior of the fibers on a sliding surface and their effect on the friction and wear were studied in terms of the amount and orientation of the fibers in the composite. Results showed that the friction level and wear resistance were strongly affected by the fiber content, and glass fiber patches produced on the sliding surface played important roles in the wear resistance of the composite. The optimum fiber content for the best wear resistance of the PA12 composite was approximately 30 wt.% and higher fiber contents had no added effect on the wear amount. The applied load also strongly affected the wear resistance due to the increase in temperature at the sliding interface, and an increase in rapid wear was observed when the interface temperature increased above the glass transition temperature of PA12. On the other hand, the fiber orientation had less effect on the friction and wear of the composite compared to the fiber content and applied load. Based on the behavior of glass fibers on the sliding surface and wear debris analysis, the wear mechanism of the PA12 composite is discussed.  相似文献   

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