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1.
《Wear》2006,260(1-2):40-49
The tribological behaviour of TiCN coating prepared by unbalanced magnetron sputtering is studied in this work. The substrates made from austenitic steel were coated by TiCN coatings during one deposition. The measurements were provided by high temperature tribometer (pin-on-disc, CSM Instruments) allowing measuring the dependency of friction coefficient on cycles (sliding distance) up to 500 °C. The evolution of the friction coefficient with the cycles was measured under different conditions, such as temperature or sliding speed and the wear rate of the ball and coating were evaluated. The 100Cr6 balls and the Si3N4 ceramic balls were used as counter-parts. The former were used at temperatures up to 200 °C, the latter up to 500 °C. The wear tracks were examined by optical methods and SEM. The surface oxidation at elevated temperatures and profile elements composition of the wear track were also measured.The experiments have shown considerable dependency of TiCN tribological parameters on temperature. Rise in temperature increased both friction coefficient and the wear rate of the coating in case of 100Cr6 balls. The main wear mechanism was a mild wear at temperatures up to 200 °C; fracture and delamination were dominating wear mechanisms at temperatures from 300 to 500 °C.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of Al2O3 content on the mechanical and tribological properties of Ni–Cr alloy was investigated from room temperature to 1000 °C. The results indicated that NiCr–40 wt% Al2O3 composite exhibited good wear resistance and its compressive strength remained 540 MPa even at 1000 °C. The values obtained for flexural strength and fracture toughness at room temperature were 771 MPa, 15.2 MPa m1/2, respectively. Between 800 °C and 1000 °C, the adhesive and plastic oxide layer on the worn surface of the composite was claimed to be responsible for low friction coefficient and wear rate.  相似文献   

3.
NiAl, NiAl–Cr–Mo alloy and NiAl matrix composites with addition of oxides (ZnO/CuO) were fabricated by powder metallurgy route. It was found that some new phases (such as NiZn3, Cu0.81Ni0.19 and Al2O3) are formed during the fabrication process due to a high-temperature solid state reaction. Tribological behavior was studied from room temperature to 1000 °C on an HT-1000 ball-on-disk high temperature tribometer. The results indicated that NiAl had high friction coefficient and wear rate at elevated temperatures, while incorporation of Cr(Mo) not only enhanced mechanical properties evidently but also improved high temperature tribological properties. Among the sintered materials, NiAl matrix composite with addition of ZnO showed the lowest wear rate at 1000 °C, while CuO addition into NiAl matrix composite exhibited the self-lubricating performance and the best tribological properties at 800 °C.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Titanium-containing diamond-like carbon (Ti-DLC) coatings were deposited on steel with a close-field unbalanced magnetron sputtering in a mixed argon/acetylene atmosphere. The morphology and structure of Ti-DLC coatings were investigated by scanning electron microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy and Raman spectroscopy. Nanoindentation, nanoscratch and unlubricated wear tests were carried out to evaluate the hardness, adhesive and tribological properties of Ti-DLC coatings. Electron microscopic observations demonstrated the presence of titanium-rich nanoscale regions surrounded by amorphous carbon structures in Ti-DLC coating. The Ti-DLC coatings exhibit friction coefficients of 0.12–0.25 and wear rates of 1.82 × 10?9 to 4.29 × 10?8 mm3/Nm, depending on the counterfaces, sliding speed and temperature. The Ti-DLC/alumina tribo-pair shows a lower friction coefficient than the Ti-DLC/steel tribo-pair under the identical wear conditions. Increasing the test temperature from room temperature to 200 °C reduces the coefficient of friction and, however, clearly increases the wear rate of Ti-DLC coatings. Different wear mechanisms, such as surface polishing, delamination and tribo-chemical reactions, were found in the tribo-contact areas, depending on different wear conditions.  相似文献   

6.
《Wear》2006,260(9-10):919-932
The variation in wear behaviour during limited debris retention sliding wear of Nimonic 80A versus Stellite 6 (counterface) between room temperature and 750 °C, at sliding speeds of 0.314, 0.654 and 0.905 m s−1, was investigated. At 0.314 m s−1, mild oxidational wear was observed at all temperatures, due to transfer and oxidation of Stellite 6-sourced debris to the Nimonic 80A and resultant separation of the Nimonic 80A and Stellite 6 wear surfaces. Between room temperature and 450 °C, this debris mostly remained in the form of loose particles (with only limited compaction), whilst between 510 and 750 °C, the particles were compacted and sintered together to form a wear protective ‘glaze’ layer.At 0.654 and 0.905 m s−1, mild oxidational wear due to transfer and oxidation of Stellite 6-sourced debris was only observed at room temperature and 270 °C (also 390 °C at 0.654 m s−1). At 390 °C (450 °C at 0.654 m s−1) and above, this oxide was completely absent and ‘metal-to-metal’ contact resulted in an intermediate temperature severe wear regime—losses in the form of ejected metallic debris were sourced almost completely from the Nimonic 80A. Oxide debris, this time sourced from the Nimonic 80A sample, did not reappear until 570 °C (630 °C at 0.654 m s−1), however, were insufficient to eliminate completely severe wear until 690 and 750 °C. At both 0.654 and 0.905 m s−1, the oxide now preventing severe wear at 690 and 750 °C tended not to form ‘glaze’ layers on the surface of the Nimonic 80A and instead supported continued high wear by abrasion. This abrasive action was attributed to the poor sintering characteristics of the Nimonic 80A-sourced oxide, in combination with the oxides’ increased mobility and decreased residency.The collected data were used to compose a simple wear map detailing the effects of sliding speed and temperature on the wear of Nimonic 80A slid against Stellite 6, at these speeds and temperatures of between room temperature and 750 °C.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
The tribological properties of evenly distributed and agglomerated nanodiamonds on steel contact surfaces were compared in ethylene glycol lubricated tests using a pin-on-disc tribometer with a steel counter ball. The nanodiamond distributions were studied on silicon and steel surfaces using scanning electron microscopy. Friction and wear decreasing effects were observed with both sprayed and agglomerated nanodiamonds. The average friction coefficient with pure ethylene glycol lubricated contacts decreased from 0.16 to 0.12 with agglomerated nanodiamonds when 100 N load was applied. A minimum for both disc wear rate (0.40×10−6 mm3/Nm) and ball wear rate (0.29×10−6 mm3/Nm) was observed with agglomerated nanodiamonds. One of the mechanisms of nanodiamond lubrication was observed to be the incorporation of nanodiamond particles in to the tribolayer.  相似文献   

9.
The production of Ni3Al was performed under an uniaxial pressure of 150 MPa at 1050 °C for 1 h. The formation temperature of Ni3Al was determined to be 655 °C. The presence of Ni3Al was confirmed by XRD analysis. SEM analysis revealed that the Ni3Al phase has very low porosity. The relative density and microhardness of test materials were 97.8% and about 359±31 HV1.0, respectively. The specific wear rate of Ni3Al was 0.029 mm3/N m for 2 N, 0.017 mm3/N m for 5 N and 0.011 mm3/N m for 10 N, respectively. The distribution of alloying elements was determined by energy-dispersive spectroscopy (EDS).  相似文献   

10.
Hardmetal coatings prepared by high velocity oxy-fuel (HVOF) spraying represent an advanced solution for surface protection against wear. In the current systematic study the high-temperature oxidation and unidirectional sliding wear in dry and lubricated conditions were studied. Results for a series of experiments on self-mated pairs in dry conditions as part of that work are described in this paper. Coatings with nominal compositions WC-10%Co4%Cr, WC-(W,Cr)2C-7%Ni, Cr3C2-25%NiCr, (Ti,Mo)(C,N)-29%Ni and (Ti,Mo)(C,N)-29%Co were prepared with an ethylene-fuelled DJH 2700 HVOF spray gun. Electrolytic hard chromium (EHC) coatings and bulk (Ti,Mo)(C,N)-15%NiMo (TM10) hardmetal specimens were studied for comparison. The wear behaviour was investigated at room temperature, 400 and 600 °C. For the coatings sliding speeds were varied in the range 0.1–1 m/s for a wear distance of 5000 m and a normal force of 10 N. In some cases the WC- and (Ti,Mo)(C,N)-based coatings showed total wear rates (sum of wear rates of the rotating and stationary samples) of less than 10?6 mm3/Nm, i.e., comparable to values typically measured under mixed/boundary conditions. Coefficients of friction above 0.4 were found for all test conditions. The P × V values as an engineering parameter for coating application are discussed. The microstructures and the sliding wear behaviour of the (Ti,Mo)(C,N)-based coatings and the (Ti,Mo)(C,N)-15%NiMo hardmetal are compared.  相似文献   

11.
The frictional and wear characteristics of nanostructured DLC films were investigated. The coatings were deposited on silicon substrates by irradiation of a mass-separated C60 ion beam with 5 keV of energy and a deposition temperature ranging from 100 to 450 °C. The effects of deposition temperature on the surface morphology, nano-structure, mechanical properties and tribological characteristics of the coatings were assessed. Results showed that deposition temperature strongly affects the nanostructure and surface morphology of the coatings. Coatings deposited at temperatures exceeding 350–400 °C exhibited an increase in surface roughness as well as compressive stress due to the formation of graphite, which led to a significant increase in the friction coefficient and wear rate. Coatings deposited at 300 °C showed the best tribological properties.  相似文献   

12.
《Wear》2006,260(1-2):1-9
In the present work, we report the processing and properties of WC–6 wt.% ZrO2 composites, densified using the pressureless sintering route. The densification of the WC–ZrO2 composites was carried out in the temperature range of 1500–1700 °C with varying time (1–3 h) in vacuum. The experimental results indicate that significantly high hardness of 22–23 GPa and moderate fracture toughness of ∼5 MPa m1/2 can be obtained with 2 mol% Y-stabilized ZrO2 sinter-additive, sintered at 1600 °C for 3 h. Furthermore, the friction and wear behavior of optimized WC–ZrO2 composite is investigated on a fretting mode I wear tester. The tribological results reveal that a moderate coefficient of friction in the range from 0.15 to 0.5 can be achieved with the optimised composite. An important observation is that a transition in friction and wear with load is noted. The dominant mechanisms of material removal appear to be tribochemical wear and spalling of tribolayer.  相似文献   

13.
D. Roy  S.S. Singh  B. Basu  W. Lojkowski  R. Mitra  I. Manna 《Wear》2009,266(11-12):1113-1118
Resistance to wear is an important factor in design and selection of structural components in relative motion against a mating surface. The present work deals with studies on fretting wear behavior of in situ nano-Al3Ti reinforced Al–Ti–Si amorphous/nanocrystalline matrix composite, processed by high pressure (8 GPa) sintering at room temperature, 350, 400 or 450 °C. The wear experiments were carried out in gross slip fretting regime to investigate the performance of this composite against Al2O3 at ambient temperature (22–25 °C) and humidity (50–55%). The highest resistance to fretting wear has been observed in the composites sintered at 400 °C. The fretting wear involves oxidation of Al3Ti particles in the composite. A continuous, smooth and protective tribolayer is formed on the worn surface of the composite sintered at 400 °C, while fragmentation and spallation leads to a rougher surface and greater wear in the composite sintered at 450 °C.  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.
High-power piezo-electric motors with power densities of 1.4 kW/kg display a potential for substituting hydraulic actuators. For this application, two novel tribometers of the same type have been designed using commercially available components for sliding motion at 40 kHz with amplitudes between 2.5 μm and 5 μm. The tribometers are equipped with means to measure amplitude, frequency, power required to keep the samples in motion and load applied. The effective motion between the two contacting bodies is monitored in each of the tribometers. These data are used to evaluate the coefficient of friction. The wear rate was determined after the tests. The set-ups were tested using well-known 100Cr6H (AISI 52100) samples before investigating novel, non-commercial substrates such as AlFeCrTi-alloys and tungsten carbide-based coatings as well as Magnéli-type coatings (Tin?2Cr2O2n?1 and TinO2n?1). This paper presents the principle of the ultra-high frequency tribometers and first tribological quantities of materials and coatings tested up to and above 1011 cycles. Very low wear rates in the range 10?8 mm3/Nm down to 10?10 mm3/Nm were determined under dry oscillation in air.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of reaction temperature on the formation of a carbon layer on the surface of SiC has been investigated. Subsequently, the tribological properties of the formed carbon layers were studied. The experimental procedure involved exposing reaction-bonded SiC balls to a flowing gas mixture of 5% Cl2, 2.5% H2, and Ar at a high temperature of 800, 1000, or 1200 °C. A ball-on disk tribometer was used to investigate the friction and wear behavior of the treated specimens. While partially unreacted SiC phases were observed in the layer modified at 800 °C, rhombohedral graphite crystals were formed in the layer modified at 1200 °C. Compared to untreated SiC, the treated SiC materials were found to have relatively low friction coefficients and better wear resistance. Increasing the treatment temperature was found to improve the tribological performance of the resulting surface-modified SiC balls. A possible reason for this tribological improvement has been discussed based on the observed carbon phases.  相似文献   

17.
The possibility of enhancing the tribological properties of ta-C at elevated temperature (250 °C) by laser surface texturing and burnished WS2 addition were investigated. Laser texturing was applied prior to ta-C coating process. Samples were tribologically tested at room temperature and elevated (250 °C) temperature using pin-on-disc. WS2 addition increased remarkably the wear life of ta-C at 250 °C and low COF values (0.01–0.02) were achieved. Laser surface texturing (LST) increased the wear life of WS2/ta-C surfaces by more than two times compared to non-textured surface. The LST dimples functioned as solid lubricant reservoirs and improved the wear life of the initial WS2 layer. This was noticed to be related to wear mechanism with raised position dimples and partly oxidized WS2.  相似文献   

18.
《Wear》2007,262(1-2):220-224
PEEK is a high strength engineering thermoplastic that suffers from a high friction coefficient and a friction induced wear mode. Past studies with 10 μm PEEK and PTFE powders resulted in composite solid lubricant that (at the optimal composition) had a wear rate of k = 2 × 10−9 mm3/Nm with a friction coefficient of μ = 0.12. A compositional grading of PEEK and PTFE is implemented in this study to create a bulk composite with the functional requirements of component strength, stiffness and wear resistance while providing solid lubrication at the sliding interface. The tribological performances of three functionally graded PEEK components were evaluated on linear reciprocating, rotating pin-on-disk and thrust washer tribometers. Wear rates comparable to samples of the bulk solid lubricant and comparable or improved frictional performance were achieved by compositionally grading the near surface region of PEEK components.  相似文献   

19.
Ion implantation has found to be an effective approach to modify surface properties of materials. The present research investigates the effect of (1) nitrogen (N), and (2) carbon subsequently with nitrogen (C + N) implantations on the mechanical and tribological properties of the titanium–aluminium–silicon–nitride (Ti–Al–Si–N) coatings. Superhard TiAlSiN coatings produced by magnetron sputtering, of approximately 2.5 μm thickness, were post-treated by implantations of N or C + N at an energy level of 50 keV. The dose range was between 5 × 1016 and 1 × 1018 ions cm?2. After implantation, the tribological performance of the coatings was investigated by a ball-on-disk tribometer against WC–6 wt.%Co ball under dry condition in ambient air. The wear performance of the samples was examined by a variety of characterization techniques, such as secondary electron microscopy (SEM), 3D profilometry, atomic force microscopy (AFM), and micro-Raman. The results showed that the wear performance of the samples depended strongly on the implanted elements and doses. There was slight improvement on the samples implanted with N whereas significant improvement was found on the C + N implantations. Particularly, the friction coefficient of the sample with 5 × 1017 C+ cm?2 and 5 × 1017 N+ cm?2 could reach 0.1. In addition, the specific wear rate of the sample was extremely low (0.85 × 10?7 mm3/Nm), which was nearly two orders of magnitude below that of the un-implanted coating. The speculation of the mechanical and tribological analyses of the samples indicates that the improvement of the N implanted and C + N implanted TiAlSiN samples could be due to a combined effect of improved hardness, plus enhanced adhesive and cohesive strength. In addition, the improved performance of the C + N implanted samples could be explained by the formation of lubricating implanted-layer, which existed mostly in sp2 C–C and C–N forms. The formation of such implanted layer could lead to a change of wear mode from strong abrasive wear to mostly adhesive wear, and result in a drop of friction coefficient and wear rate.  相似文献   

20.
A computational model to predict polyethylene wear in modular total knee replacements was developed. The results from knee simulator wear tests were implemented with finite element simulations to identify the wear factors of Archard's wear law. The calculated wear factor for the articular and backside surface was 1.03±0.22×10−7 mm3/Nm and 2.43±0.52×10−10 mm3/Nm, respectively. The difference in wear factors was attributed to differences in wear mode and wear mechanisms between the articular (mainly two-body rolling/sliding wear mode with an abrasive/adhesive wear mechanism) and the backside surfaces (mainly fretting wear mode with an adhesive wear mechanism).  相似文献   

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