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1.
A recent investigation suggests that selected oxides perform well as additives in molybdenum disulphide (MoS2) because of their ability to soften at asperity contacts with the result that the solid lubricant can attain and retain a preferred tribological orientation.This research determined the effectiveness of boric oxide (B2O3), when used as an additive in MoS2, for substrate temperatures ranging from 21°C to 316°C. This range was used to allow the asperity contact temperature to vary below and above the softening point of B2O3. It was found that a moderate friction coefficient and high wear, which is attributed to the additive acting abrasively, occurred when the asperity contact temperature was well below the softening point of the oxide. When the asperity contact temperature neared the softening point of the oxide, the friction coefficient increased dramatically and wear volume was reduced. It is postulated that B2O3 acted adhesively at the interface resulting in a higher coefficient of friction, and wear decreased due to an attainment of a preferred orientation by the MoS2. For asperity contact temperatures significantly above the softening point of B2O3, the friction coefficient returned to about the same value as for temperatures below the softening point. It is speculated that wear continued to increase moderately because of localized melting of the B2O3, permitting the MoS2 to be removed from the interface. These observations support a hypothesis that an additive, such as boric oxide, can soften as the asperity contact temperature approaches the softening point temperature of the additive so that the overall tribological conditions may be improved resulting in reduced interfacial wear. Significant changes in temperature, load or sliding velocity would, of course, dramatically alter the wear characteristics observed at the interface.  相似文献   

2.
The friction and wear properties of the polyetheretherketone (PEEK) based composites filled with 5 mass% nanometer or micron Al2O3 with or without 10 mass% polytetrafluroethylene (PTFE) against the medium carbon steel (AISI 1045 steel) ring under the dry sliding condition at Amsler wear tester were examined. A constant sliding velocity of 0.42 m s−1 and a load of 196 N were used in all experiments. The average diameter 250 μm PEEK powders, the 15 or 90 nm Al2O3 nano-particles or 500 nm Al2O3 particles and/or the PTFE fine powders of diameter 50 μm were mechanically mixed in alcohol, and then the block composite specimens were prepared by the heat compression moulding. The homogeneously dispersion of the Al2O3 nano-particles in PEEK matrix of the prepared composites was analyzed by the atomic force microscopy (AFM). The wear testing results showed that nanometer and micron Al2O3 reduced the wear coefficient of PEEK composites without PTFE effectively, but not reduced the friction coefficient. The filling of 10 mass% PTFE into pure PEEK resulted in a decrease of the friction coefficient and the wear coefficient of the filled composite simultaneously. However, when 10 mass% PTFE was filled into Al2O3/ PEEK composites, the friction coefficient was decreased and the wear coefficient increased. The worn scars on the tested composite specimen surfaces and steel ring surfaces were observed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). A thin, uniform, and tenacious transferred film on the surface of the steel rings against the PEEK composites filled with 5 mass% 15 nm Al2O3 particles but without PTFE was formed. The components of the transferred films were detected by energy dispersive spectrometry (EDS). The results indicated that the nanometer Al2O3 as the filler, together with PEEK matrix, transferred to the counterpart ring surface during the sliding friction and wear. Therefore, the ability of Al2O3 to improve the wear resistant behaviors is closely related to the ability to improve the characteristics of the transfer film.  相似文献   

3.
The processes of wear of tetragonal zirconia-based ceramics partially stabilized with yttrium oxide (Y-TZP) are studied during dry high-speed sliding in pin-on-disk pairs at sliding velocities up to 47 m/s. It is shown that these wear tests produce tribolayers of intricate composition on the surface of the Y-TZP and Y-TZP-Al2O3 ceramic materials, inducing nonmonotonous wear-rate changes. The normal wear changes into disastrous highly intensive wear at the first stage when the sliding accelerates (from 0.1 to 4 m/s). At the second stage (in the velocity range from 6 to 47 m/s) the wear rate drops almost to its initial value, typical of slow sliding velocities (0.1 m/s). In this velocity range, the friction of the Y-TZP and Y-TZP-Al2O3 ceramics is almost wearless.  相似文献   

4.
Tribological behaviors and the relevant mechanism of a highly pure polycrystalline bulk Ti3AlC2 sliding dryly against a low carbon steel disk were investigated. The tribological tests were carried out using a block-on-disk type high-speed friction tester, at the sliding speeds of 20–60 m/s under a normal pressure of 0.8 MPa. The results showed that the friction coefficient is as low as 0.1∼0.14 and the wear rate of Ti3AlC2 is only (2.3–2.5) × 10−6 mm3/Nm in the sliding speed range of 20–60 m/s. Such unusual friction and wear properties were confirmed to be dependant dominantly upon the presence of a frictional oxide film consisting of amorphous Ti, Al, and Fe oxides on the friction surfaces. The oxide film is in a fused state during the sliding friction at a fused temperature of 238–324 °C, so it takes a significant self-lubricating effect.  相似文献   

5.
Friction and wear behaviors of diamond-like carbon (DLC) film in humid N2 (RH-100%) sliding against different counterpart ball (Si3N4 ball, Al2O3 ball and steel ball) were investigated. It was found that the friction and wear behaviors of DLC film were dependent on the friction-induced tribochemical interactions in the presence of the DLC film, water molecules and counterpart balls. When sliding against Si3N4 ball, a tribochemical film that mainly consisted of silica gel was formed on the worn surface due to the oxidation and hydrolysis of the Si3N4 ball, and resulted in the lowest friction coefficient and wear rate of the DLC film. The degradation of the DLC film catalyzed by Al2O3 ball caused the highest wear rate of DLC film when sliding against Al2O3 ball, while the tribochemical reactions between DLC film and steel ball led to the highest friction coefficient when sliding against steel ball.  相似文献   

6.
The tribological behaviour of single‐phase SiC as well as both SiC–TiC and SiC–TiC–TiB2 composite materials sliding against aluminium oxide has been investigated at room temperature with regard to the formation of wear‐reducing interfaces. The experiments were carried out in dry air for reasons of excluding the strong influence of water vapour. The introduction of the titanium phases into the SiC microstructure reduces the system wear by more than a factor of ten. The coefficient of friction is only slightly reduced but stabilised with time. The relatively abrasive oxide interface in the Al2O3/SiC pairing is altered to a soft and malleable oxide interface in the Al2O3/SiC–TiC–TiB2 pairing. The wear reduction is mainly caused by a change of the wear mechanism so that the formed soft oxide wear debris is transferred to the counterbody, thus shifting the sliding plane further into the layer. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

7.
The tribological characteristics of low-pressure plasma-sprayed (LPPS) Al2O3 coating sliding against alumina ball have been investigated from room temperature to 800 °C. These friction and wear data have been compared quantitatively with those of bulk sintered alumina to obtain a better understanding of wear mechanisms at elevated temperatures. The friction and wear of Al2O3 coating show a strong dependence on temperature, changing from a mild to a severe wear regime with the increase of temperature. The coefficient of friction at room temperature is approximately 0.17 to 0.42, depending on applied load. The tribochemical reaction between the coating surface and water vapor in the environment and the presence of the hydroxide film on the Al2O3 coating reduce the friction and wear at room temperature as contrasted to those of bulk sintered alumina. At intermediate temperatures, from 400 to 600 °C, the friction and wear behavior of Al2O3 coating depends on the inter-granular fracture and pull-out of Al2O3 grains. At above 700 °C, formation and deformation of fine grain layer, and abrasive wear in the form of removal of fine alumina grains further facilitate the friction and wear process of Al2O3 coating.  相似文献   

8.
TiN and TiAlN thin hard coatings have been widely applied on machine components and cutting tools to increase their wear resistance. These coatings have different wear behaviors, and determination of their wear characteristics in high-temperature and high-speed applications has great importance in the selection of suitable coating material to application. In this article, the wear behavior of single-layer TiN and TiAlN coatings was investigated at higher sliding speed and higher sliding distances than those in the literature. The coatings were deposited on AISI D2 cold-worked tool steel substrates using a magnetron sputtering system. The wear tests were performed at a sliding speed of 45 cm/s using a ball-on-disc method, and the wear area was investigated at seven different sliding distances (36–1,416 m). An Al2O3 ball was used as the counterpart material. The wear evolution was monitored using a confocal optical microscope and surface profilometer after each sliding test. The coefficient of friction and coefficient of wear were recorded with increasing sliding distance. It was found that the wear rate of the TiAlN coating decreases with sliding distance and it is much lower than that of TiN coating at longer sliding distance. This is due to the Al2O3 film formation at high temperature in the contact zone. Both coatings give similar coefficient of friction data during sliding with a slight increase in that of the TiAlN coating at high sliding distances due to the increasing alumina formation. When considering all results, the TiAlN coating is more suitable for hard machining applications.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of some anti-wear additives on the friction and wear behaviour of plasma-sprayed Cr2O3 coating were investigated using a block-on-ring tester at ambient conditions. The results show that zinc dialkyldithiophosphate (ZDDP), tricesyl phosphate (TCP) and tributyl phosphate (TBP) significantly reduce the wear of Cr2O3 coating lubricated by paraffin oil. Additive concentrations as well as sliding time have great influence on the wear. The friction coefficient varies slightly with test conditions. The analysis by XPS of worn surfaces indicates that the wear resistance of these additives is due to the formation of tribochemical reaction films by reacting with Cr2O3 coatings.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of the sliding speed on friction and wear characteristics of plasma-sprayed ceramic coatings (Al2O3-13% TiO2, ZrO2-8% Y2O3, Al2O3-modified) was studied. Plasma-sprayed coatings are not hard and have high layered structure. Abrasion of coatings in the friction pair with steel and bronze counter-bodies occurs through brittle detachment conglomerated regions with low cohesive resistance. The modified coating (Al2O3) has the highest wear resistance and the lower coefficient of friction compared to the coatings (Al2O3-13% TiO2, ZrO2-8% Y2O3) in the studied velocity range (0.1–10 mm/s). Laser melting can be used as an efficient way of increasing the tribotechnical properties of plasma-sprayed oxide coatings.  相似文献   

11.
Reciprocating sliding wear experiments were conducted on cold-sprayed pure aluminum and Al–22.6 wt% Al2O3 coatings using a custom-built in situ tribometer. Using a transparent sapphire counterface for the wear tests, the dynamic behavior of third body material in the contact was optically observed. The presence of Al2O3 particles led to greater stability of the transfer films adhering to the sapphire counterface, as well as greater stability of the friction coefficient and lower wear rates. Ex situ microanalysis of material in the wear tracks and transfer films suggests that the presence of Al2O3 particles promoted strain localization during sliding. This produced more uniform third body microstructures and protected the underlying aluminum matrix from deformation, which slowed the rate of transfer to the counterface.  相似文献   

12.
(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   

13.
This paper studies the friction and wear behaviour of two important bearing materials, Thordon XL and LgSn80, in dry and lubricated sliding vs. plasma-sprayed Cr2O3 coatings. As a reference, AISI 1043 steel is also studied under the same conditions. SEM, EDS and surface topography were employed to study the wear mechanisms. The results indicate that the Thordon XL/Cr2O3 coating pair gives the lowest dry friction coefficient (0.16) under a normal load of 45.3 N (pressure 0.453 MPa) at a velocity of 1 m/s. The dry friction coefficient of Thordon XL/Cr2O3 coating increases to 0.38 under a normal load of 88.5 N (pressure 0.885 MPa). The dry friction coefficients of the LgSn80/Cr2O3 coating are in the range of 0.31–0.46. Secondly, both dry wear rate under low normal load (45.3 N) and lubricated wear rate under a load of 680 N for Thordon XL are lower than those of LgSn80 in sliding against plasma-sprayed Cr2O3 coatings at a speed of 1 m/s. However, under a normal load of 88.5 N the dry wear rate of Thordon XL is much higher than that of LgSn80. Thirdly, a high viscosity lubricant (SAE 140) leads to lower wear for Thordon XL and LgSn80 than a low viscosity lubricant (SAE 30). Finally, the dominating wear mechanism for Thordon XL is shear fracture when against the plasma-sprayed Cr2O3 ceramic coating. For LgSn80 against plasma-sprayed Cr2O3 ceramic coating, abrasive wear is the governing failure mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
Reciprocating sliding friction experiments were conducted with various two-phase, directionally solidified Al2O3/ZrO2 (Y2O3) pins sliding on B4C flats in air at temperatures of 296, 873, and 1073 K under dry sliding conditions. Results indicate that all the Al2O3/ZrO2 (Y2O3) ceramics, from highly Al2O3-rich to ZrO2-rich, exceed the main wear criterion requirement of 10−6 mm3 N−1 m−1 or lower for effective wear-resistant applications. Particularly, the eutectics and Al2O3-rich ceramics showed superior wear properties. The composition and microstructure of Al2O3/ZrO2 (Y2O3) ceramics played a dominant role in controlling the wear and friction properties. The controlling mechanism of the ceramic wear, friction, and hardness was an intrinsic effect involving the resistance to shear fracture of heterophase bonding and cohesive bonding and the interlocking microstructures at different scales in the ceramics.  相似文献   

15.
《Wear》2006,260(1-2):215-222
Microplasma oxidation (MPO) has recently been studied as a cost-effective plasma electrolytic process to provide thick and hard ceramic coatings with excellent surface load-bearing capacity on aluminum alloys. However, for sliding wear applications, such ceramic coatings often exhibit relatively high friction coefficients against many counterface materials. Although coatings deposited by physical vapour deposition (PVD) techniques such as TiN coatings are well known for providing surfaces with a high hardness, in practice they often exhibit poor performance under mechanical loading, since the coatings are usually too thin to protect the substrate from the contact conditions. In this paper, these challenges were overcome by a duplex process of microplasma oxidation and arc ion plating (AIP), in which an alumina layer Al2O3 was deposited on an Al alloy substrate (using MPO as a pre-treatment process) for load support, and a TiN hard coatings were deposited (using AIP) on top of the Al2O3 layer for low friction coefficient. Microhardness measurements, pin-on-disc sliding wear tests, and antiwear tests using a Timken tester were performed to evaluate the mechanical and tribological properties. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was used to observe coating morphology, and to examine wear scars from pin-on-disc test. The research demonstrates that a hard and uniform TiN coating, with good adhesion and a low coefficient of friction, can successfully be deposited on top of an alumina intermediate layer to provide excellent load support. The investigations indicate that a duplex combination of MPO coating and TiN PVD coating represents a promising technique for surface modification of Al alloys for heavy surface load bearing application.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
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   

18.
《Wear》2007,262(1-2):36-41
The present study is the first to show that the supply of nanometer-sized particles of Fe2O3, SnO2, CuO, or Bi2O3 oxide on rubbing steel surfaces induces transition to mild wear with sliding distance, and that the wear transition behavior depends on the type of supplied oxide. The mild wear is due to formation of the wear-protective tribofilm on the rubbing surfaces, and observations confirm that the tribofilms are produced by tribo-sintering of the supplied oxide particles. The mild wear transition behavior is explained by the sintering rate of the supplied oxide particles, which is related to the oxygen diffusion coefficient in the oxide and the particle diameter. When the supplied oxide is of high diffusivity, the tribofilm formation rate is high, owing to the high sintering rate of the oxide particles, and the mild wear transition occurs at a short sliding distance. In the case of Fe2O3 oxide, the sliding distance of the transition from severe to mild wear is decreased when finer particles are supplied, suggesting that fine particles are easily sintered on the wear surface.  相似文献   

19.
Jin  Ying  Kato  Koji  Umehara  Noritsugu 《Tribology Letters》1999,6(3-4):225-232
The friction and wear behaviors of the self‐lubricating Al2O3–20Ag20CaF2 disk against an Al2O3 pin pair have been investigated over a broad load range from 1 to 30 N and sliding velocities from 0.084 to 1 m/s at 650°C. Four typical wear modes have been identified and the wear mode map was constructed to illustrate the influence of load and speed on the friction coefficient and wear rate. The results showed the effective self‐lubricating region (II) (continuous lubricating film) is almost independent of sliding speed, and mainly dependent on the load. It is suggested that the plastic deformation and plastic flow during sliding play an important role in the formation of the self‐lubricating film on the sliding surface. Furthermore, the worn surface in the region (II) (continuous lubricating film) was found to be much softer than the original surface and the distribution of Vickers hardness became more uniform due to the presence of the lubricating film on the worn surface. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

20.
Ziqi Sun  Ling Wu  Meishuan Li  Yanchun Zhou 《Wear》2009,266(9-10):960-967
Reciprocating ball-on-flat dry sliding friction and wear experiments have been conducted on single-phase γ-Y2Si2O7 ceramic flats in contact with AISI 52100 bearing steel and Si3N4 ceramic balls at 5–15 N normal loads in an ambient environment. The kinetic friction coefficients of γ-Y2Si2O7 varied in the range over 0.53–0.63 against AISI 52100 steel and between 0.51–0.56 against Si3N4 ceramic. We found that wear occurred predominantly during the running-in period and it almost ceased at the steady friction stage. The wear rates of γ-Y2Si2O7 were in the order of 10?4 mm3/(N m). Besides, wear debris strongly influenced the friction and wear processes. The strong chemical affinity between γ-Y2Si2O7 and AISI 52100 balls led to a thick transfer layer formed on both contact surfaces of the flat and counterpart ball, which changed the direct sliding between the ball and the flat into a shearing within the transfer layer. For the γ-Y2Si2O7/Si3N4 pair, a thin silica hydrate lubricant tribofilm presented above the compressed debris entrapped in the worn track and contact ball surface. This transfer layer and the tribofilm separated the sliding couple from direct contact and contributed to the low friction coefficient and wear rate.  相似文献   

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