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Original Articles

Transfer Solid Lubrication of Aluminum Sliding Contacts

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Pages 265-270 | Received 03 Jul 2007, Accepted 15 Oct 2007, Published online: 14 Jun 2008
 

Abstract

The effects of transfer from solid lubricant sticks of unfilled, glass-filled, and bronze-filled PTFE on the room-temperature wear and friction of trailing primary contacts of aluminum (6061 T6) rods in repetitive intermittent contacts were investigated in a ring-on-rod configuration. The materials of the ring countersurfaces upon which the solid lubricants transferred and against which the trailing aluminum rods wore included steel, aluminum, copper, and an oxide dispersion-strengthened copper alloy. This sliding of the unlubricated copper ring countersurfaces against the aluminum led to the roughening of the copper as large (> 1 mm) aluminum particles embedded themselves upon the countersurface, with consequent transitions in the aluminum wear rate and the coefficient of friction to values exceeding 6 × 10− 3 mm3/Nm and 0.6, respectively, after an incubation period of several initial contacts of lower wear rate and friction. The other ring countersurface materials resulted in similarly high aluminum rod wear rate and coefficient of friction, more nearly from the onset of sliding. The application of unfilled PTFE solid lubricant transfer reduced the aluminum's gouging of the copper countersurfaces and correspondingly reduced the aluminum rod wear rate and the coefficient of friction against the copper, as well as against all other countersurface materials, towards 2 × 10−3 mm3/Nm and 0.3 or less, respectively. Glass- and bronze-filled PTFE transfer lubricants provided reductions in the wear rate of the aluminum rod comparable to or in some cases better than the unfilled PTFE, though the unfilled PTFE transfer lubricant in several cases provided better friction reduction.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This research was supported by the Office of Naval Research's Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative grant “Friction and Wear under Very High Electromagnetic Stress,” awarded to the Georgia Institute of Technology (S. Danyluk, principal investigator) with Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute as a collaborating institution.

Presented at the STLE annual meeting, Philadelphia, PA, May 6-10, 2007

Review led by Ton Karis

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