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    Generation of Submicrometer Particles in Dry Sliding Contact

    Source: Journal of Tribology:;1990:;volume( 112 ):;issue: 004::page 684
    Author:
    J. L. Xuan
    ,
    R. J. Miller
    ,
    H. S. Cheng
    DOI: 10.1115/1.2920316
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: The generation of submicrometer-sized particles during dry sliding between stainless steel surfaces is investigated by means of a laser spectrometer for particle counting and scanning tunnelling microscopy for asperity topography characterization. It has been found that, when the submicrometer wear increases with increasing sliding distance or with an initially rougher surface, the number of particles having a submicrometer size is a power function of that size. The two wear coefficients in the power function are determined empirically for the case of stainless steel contact. Different from the generation pattern of several-micrometer particles, the generation rate of submicrometer particles continuously increases until reaching the equilibrium surface condition. The asperity topography measurement shows the micrometer-sized asperities also have subasperities whose sizes are about one order of magnitude smaller. An asperity model similar to Archard’s is thus proposed for estimation of submicrometer wear. The dominant wear mechanisms are brittle fracture and plastic deformation combined with adhesion transfer. The asperity contact can be considered as a plastic-elastic deformation system with subasperities deformed plastically all the time and the micrometer asperities first deformed plastically and then deformed elastically because of the significant increase of microhardness on the soft surface in a metal pair. When the microhardness ratio between two rubbing surfaces reaches a stable value, the generation of submicrometer particles reaches the maximum rate and the wear grows steadily.
    keyword(s): Particulate matter , Wear , Microhardness , Stainless steel , Deformation , Mechanisms , Metals , Lasers , Tunnel construction , Equilibrium (Physics) , Microscopy AND Brittle fracture ,
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      Generation of Submicrometer Particles in Dry Sliding Contact

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/107529
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    contributor authorJ. L. Xuan
    contributor authorR. J. Miller
    contributor authorH. S. Cheng
    date accessioned2017-05-08T23:33:42Z
    date available2017-05-08T23:33:42Z
    date copyrightOctober, 1990
    date issued1990
    identifier issn0742-4787
    identifier otherJOTRE9-28485#684_1.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/107529
    description abstractThe generation of submicrometer-sized particles during dry sliding between stainless steel surfaces is investigated by means of a laser spectrometer for particle counting and scanning tunnelling microscopy for asperity topography characterization. It has been found that, when the submicrometer wear increases with increasing sliding distance or with an initially rougher surface, the number of particles having a submicrometer size is a power function of that size. The two wear coefficients in the power function are determined empirically for the case of stainless steel contact. Different from the generation pattern of several-micrometer particles, the generation rate of submicrometer particles continuously increases until reaching the equilibrium surface condition. The asperity topography measurement shows the micrometer-sized asperities also have subasperities whose sizes are about one order of magnitude smaller. An asperity model similar to Archard’s is thus proposed for estimation of submicrometer wear. The dominant wear mechanisms are brittle fracture and plastic deformation combined with adhesion transfer. The asperity contact can be considered as a plastic-elastic deformation system with subasperities deformed plastically all the time and the micrometer asperities first deformed plastically and then deformed elastically because of the significant increase of microhardness on the soft surface in a metal pair. When the microhardness ratio between two rubbing surfaces reaches a stable value, the generation of submicrometer particles reaches the maximum rate and the wear grows steadily.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleGeneration of Submicrometer Particles in Dry Sliding Contact
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume112
    journal issue4
    journal titleJournal of Tribology
    identifier doi10.1115/1.2920316
    journal fristpage684
    journal lastpage691
    identifier eissn1528-8897
    keywordsParticulate matter
    keywordsWear
    keywordsMicrohardness
    keywordsStainless steel
    keywordsDeformation
    keywordsMechanisms
    keywordsMetals
    keywordsLasers
    keywordsTunnel construction
    keywordsEquilibrium (Physics)
    keywordsMicroscopy AND Brittle fracture
    treeJournal of Tribology:;1990:;volume( 112 ):;issue: 004
    contenttypeFulltext
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