Most mechanical assemblies have one or more solid interfaces that can be critical to the function of the assembly. When there is a relative motion between these solids friction and wear occur. For most systems, it is desirable to have low friction and low wear to make these systems either work better, require less energy, or last longer. Some systems require high friction (i.e., tires) and some even high wear (i.e., crayons), however most efforts are focused on developing low wear and low friction applications.
In design of a mechanical system, the properties of the materials selected by the engineer are as imperative as the design itself. Often, design engineers will use reference charts or other published and non-published data to select a material for application specific properties. As an engineer tries to optimize a design, accuracy of these properties become of crucial importance. This can be challenging when designing tribological components as friction coefficients and wear rates are not simply material properties. Friction and wear behavior of materials depend on many parameters and conditions, including:
These system specific variations in tribological properties require scientists to study material pairings in very specific experimental conditions to provide reliable data. Even worse, many mechanical assemblies have to work in multiple environments such as a watercraft that must operate in air and submerged, or spacecraft components that must operate in both terrestrial and the various space environments [1]. Some components must provide reliable wear and friction against multiple counter materials.
Solid Lubricants
Although extremely low friction coefficients and wear rates can be achieved with fluids and greases, fluids and greases are often undesirable, and sometimes unacceptable, in many systems [2]. Fluid lubricants often have a narrow temperature range in which they can operate. Fluid lubricants require seals and filtration systems to keep proper function. In some cases, they require specific sliding speeds to generate hydrodynamic lubrication. Greases are also affected by their operating environment, including temperature and pressure. Fluids and greases can easily migrate or get contaminated.
In the cases where a fluid or grease lubricant is no longer ideal, solid lubricants are an excellent solution. Solid lubricants provide many added benefits including:
Though a solid lubricant can offer many advantageous properties, they do have one major downfall that scientists and engineers must accept or try to overcome: solid lubricants wear. This wear manifests as design problems in that the lubricant has a finite lifetime and generates wear debris. For obvious reasons, it is desirable to increase the lifetime of a tribological component to as long as possible (or at least until other parts of the system will fail first). The generation of wear debris is a less obvious problem, but in many systems, such as biological implants, the wear debris composition and morphology is more important than the wear rates and friction coefficients.
Many materials have been used as solid lubricants [2]. Low shear strength metals and thin metallic films, such as gold, silver and lead have been used as solid lubricants [3]. These materials are inert and act as a sacrificial component. Lamellar solids such as Graphite, MoS2, WS2, talc, and boric acid are popular as extremely low friction solid lubricants; low interaction energy between lamellar layers allow these materials to shear easily [4]. These materials often exhibit extreme dependence on environmental constituents such as water [5].
Diamond-like carbon (DLC) coatings show extremely low friction and wear, especially in dry and vacuum conditions [6]. However, temperature and oxidation are limiting factors for conventional DLC’s. Some advanced DLC’s attempt to alleviate these concerns by adding dopants.
Polymers and polymeric composites are frequent candidates for solid lubrication systems [7-10]. Common tribological polymer matrices include polyether ether ketone (PEEK), polyimide (PI), polyamide imide (PAI), Polyethylene and Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE). PEEK, PI, and PAI have desirable mechanical and thermal properties with moderate wear behaviors but have higher friction coefficient. PTFE and similar fluoropolymers have low friction coefficients but suffer from poor wear. Using volume fractions of fillers, this wear can be reduced [8, 11-46].
Motivation: Development of Low-Friction, Ultra-Low-Wear Materials for Dry Sliding
Traditional solid lubricants for dry sliding each have their benefits and limiting properties. Engineers are pushing designs to last longer, be more efficient, and operate in more extreme environments. This means that solid lubricants must have lower wear rates, lower friction coefficients and be robust enough to operate in chemical, physical and thermal extremes. Although commonly overlooked, in many cases it is important for materials on both sides of the interface to be low wearing. Sometimes, in low friction systems, when one material is low wear it is at the expense of another material. Dry solid lubrication systems that form transfer films can often prevent this problem and promote low friction and low wear of both entities in the contact.
To date, there is no universal answer to the engineer’s material needs for solid lubricants, but there are good, and even great, materials for specific applications or specific environments. There are a few obvious paths for developing new low-friction, low-wear materials for applications in various environments and mechanical systems:
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