The Role of Asperity Geometry and Roughness Orientation for the Friction-Reducing Effect of Adsorbed Molecular Films

The influence of roughness orientation on the friction-speed characteristics of adsorbed films was investigated by changing the angle of the anisotropically striated roughness to the sliding direction of the counter surface. As the angle of the striated roughness becomes perpendicular to the sliding...

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Autores principales: Masaki Tsuchiko, Saiko Aoki, Masabumi Masuko
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Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Japanese Society of Tribologists 2016
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:4c0fb2cec59a440f8d7ff6247a4d2bb62021-11-05T09:21:40ZThe Role of Asperity Geometry and Roughness Orientation for the Friction-Reducing Effect of Adsorbed Molecular Films1881-219810.2474/trol.11.140https://doaj.org/article/4c0fb2cec59a440f8d7ff6247a4d2bb62016-04-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/trol/11/2/11_140/_pdf/-char/enhttps://doaj.org/toc/1881-2198The influence of roughness orientation on the friction-speed characteristics of adsorbed films was investigated by changing the angle of the anisotropically striated roughness to the sliding direction of the counter surface. As the angle of the striated roughness becomes perpendicular to the sliding direction, the friction coefficient is decreased. The friction-speed characteristics of the adsorbed film in the transverse direction of the striated roughness having different height or shape of asperities were also investigated. The friction coefficient obtained in the low speed region decreased with increasing arithmetic mean peak curvature (Spc) when stearic acid-formulated oil was used as a lubricant oil. The results demonstrated that the roughness orientation and the asperity shape of the transverse roughness were key factors for generating additional load-bearing pressure so that the adsorbed films could exert their intrinsic friction-reducing effects.Masaki TsuchikoSaiko AokiMasabumi MasukoJapanese Society of Tribologistsarticleboundary lubricationsurface roughnessstriated roughnessadsorbed filmmicro-ehlPhysicsQC1-999Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)TA1-2040Mechanical engineering and machineryTJ1-1570ChemistryQD1-999ENTribology Online, Vol 11, Iss 2, Pp 140-151 (2016)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic boundary lubrication
surface roughness
striated roughness
adsorbed film
micro-ehl
Physics
QC1-999
Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
TA1-2040
Mechanical engineering and machinery
TJ1-1570
Chemistry
QD1-999
spellingShingle boundary lubrication
surface roughness
striated roughness
adsorbed film
micro-ehl
Physics
QC1-999
Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
TA1-2040
Mechanical engineering and machinery
TJ1-1570
Chemistry
QD1-999
Masaki Tsuchiko
Saiko Aoki
Masabumi Masuko
The Role of Asperity Geometry and Roughness Orientation for the Friction-Reducing Effect of Adsorbed Molecular Films
description The influence of roughness orientation on the friction-speed characteristics of adsorbed films was investigated by changing the angle of the anisotropically striated roughness to the sliding direction of the counter surface. As the angle of the striated roughness becomes perpendicular to the sliding direction, the friction coefficient is decreased. The friction-speed characteristics of the adsorbed film in the transverse direction of the striated roughness having different height or shape of asperities were also investigated. The friction coefficient obtained in the low speed region decreased with increasing arithmetic mean peak curvature (Spc) when stearic acid-formulated oil was used as a lubricant oil. The results demonstrated that the roughness orientation and the asperity shape of the transverse roughness were key factors for generating additional load-bearing pressure so that the adsorbed films could exert their intrinsic friction-reducing effects.
format article
author Masaki Tsuchiko
Saiko Aoki
Masabumi Masuko
author_facet Masaki Tsuchiko
Saiko Aoki
Masabumi Masuko
author_sort Masaki Tsuchiko
title The Role of Asperity Geometry and Roughness Orientation for the Friction-Reducing Effect of Adsorbed Molecular Films
title_short The Role of Asperity Geometry and Roughness Orientation for the Friction-Reducing Effect of Adsorbed Molecular Films
title_full The Role of Asperity Geometry and Roughness Orientation for the Friction-Reducing Effect of Adsorbed Molecular Films
title_fullStr The Role of Asperity Geometry and Roughness Orientation for the Friction-Reducing Effect of Adsorbed Molecular Films
title_full_unstemmed The Role of Asperity Geometry and Roughness Orientation for the Friction-Reducing Effect of Adsorbed Molecular Films
title_sort role of asperity geometry and roughness orientation for the friction-reducing effect of adsorbed molecular films
publisher Japanese Society of Tribologists
publishDate 2016
url https://doaj.org/article/4c0fb2cec59a440f8d7ff6247a4d2bb6
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