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Understanding the tribological impacts of alkali element on lubrication of binary borate melt

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posted on 2024-11-16, 04:30 authored by Hoang Bach Tran, Anh TieuAnh Tieu, Shanhong WanShanhong Wan, Hongtao ZhuHongtao Zhu, Shaogang Cui, Liping Wang
Melt lubricants have been regarded as an effective class to deliver lubrication on moving mechanical contacts at extreme temperatures. Among the elementary constituents, alkali elements play a critical role in governing the physical-chemical characteristics of the lubricant despite the obscurity regarding their intrinsic roles on the rubbing interfaces. The present study attempts to unfold the effects of sodium on the tribological responses of mating steel pair under borate melt lubrication. It has been found that the involvement of Na inspires a total reversal in lubricating potentials of the lone B2O3melt manifested by remarkable friction reduction, wear inhibition and prolonged load-bearing capacity. These exceptional performances are attributed to the accretion of nanothin Na layers on the contact interfaces. The interfacial occurrences are interpreted from a physico-chemistry perspective while the influences of surface microstructure are also discussed in detail. Multiple characterizations are employed to thoroughly examine the sliding interfaces in multi-dimensions including Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM), Scanning Transmission Electron Microscopy (STEM) and Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM). In addition, chemical fingerprints of relevant elements are determined by Energy Dispersive Spectroscopy (EDS) and Electron Loss Energy Spectroscopy (EELS).

Funding

A new adaptive composite phosphate-polymer lubricant for hot metal forming

Australian Research Council

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Citation

Tran, B. H., Tieu, K., Wan, S., Zhu, H., Cui, S. & Wang, L. (2018). Understanding the tribological impacts of alkali element on lubrication of binary borate melt. RSC Advances: an international journal to further the chemical sciences, 8 (51), 28847-28860.

Journal title

RSC Advances

Volume

8

Issue

51

Pagination

28847-28860

Language

English

RIS ID

129884

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