Artículo
Shear and thermal effects in boundary film formation during sliding
Fecha de publicación:
05/2014
Editorial:
Royal Society of Chemistry
Revista:
RSC Advances
ISSN:
2046-2069
Idioma:
Inglés
Tipo de recurso:
Artículo publicado
Clasificación temática:
Resumen
A prerequisite for understanding mechano- and tribochemical reaction pathways is that the interface be in thermodynamic equilibrium and that the temperature be well defined. It is suggested that this occurs in two regimes: when the surfaces are only slightly perturbed during sliding, leading to negligible frictional heating, and when the surface temperatures are very high (1000 K), in the so-called extreme pressure regime. The tribochemistry occurring in each regime is discussed in terms of the elementary steps leading to tribofilm formation, namely (i) a reaction of the additive or gas-phase lubricant on the surface to form an adsorbed precursor, (ii) decomposition of the molecular precursor, (iii) a process that causes the formation of a tribofilm that (iv) regenerates a clean surface that allows this tribochemical cycle to continue to form a thicker film. These steps are thermally driven in the extreme-pressure regime, while under milder conditions, they are induced by interfacial shear. In intermediate situations, the processes are likely to be a combination of those occurring at the extrema.
Palabras clave:
Shear-Induced
,
Boundary-Film
,
Thermal Effects
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Articulos(INFAP)
Articulos de INST. DE FISICA APLICADA "DR. JORGE ANDRES ZGRABLICH"
Articulos de INST. DE FISICA APLICADA "DR. JORGE ANDRES ZGRABLICH"
Citación
Furlong, Octavio Javier; Miller, Brendan Paul; Kotvis, Peter V.; Adams, Heather; Tysoe, Wilfred T.; Shear and thermal effects in boundary film formation during sliding; Royal Society of Chemistry; RSC Advances; 4; 46; 5-2014; 24059-24066
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