Lubrication mechanisms of dispersed carbon microspheres in boundary through hydrodynamic lubrication regimes

J Colloid Interface Sci. 2023 Nov 15;650(Pt B):1801-1810. doi: 10.1016/j.jcis.2023.07.089. Epub 2023 Jul 18.

Abstract

Hypothesis: Carbon microspheres have been shown to reduce friction and surface wear at relatively low speeds and high applied loads (i.e., within the boundary lubrication regime). We hypothesize that in dilute colloidal lubricating systems there is an interplay between the size of the carbon microspheres and the lubrication gap size, which determines the dominant lubricating mechanism of the system.

Experiments: A 60 wt% aqueous glycerol solution was used as the base lubricant and compared to various carbon particle-based lubricant formulations ranging in particle concentrations from 0.05 to 0.30 vol%. The tribological properties of the various lubricant formulations were tested on a pin-on-disk tribometer. A simplified Stribeck plot was produced to understand the changing mechanism of lubrication over a wide range of conditions.

Findings: The Stribeck curves show that the carbon microspheres assist lubrication by a rolling mechanism primarily in the boundary lubrication regime. A 0.20 vol% carbon-based lubricant formulation showed the best friction reduction compared to the base lubricant. Increasing speed increases the lubricating gap between the friction pair beyond the size of the particles, thereby nullifying the rolling mechanism of the particles. We introduce a modified specific film thickness parameter to determine the lubrication regime in a particle-lubricant system.

Keywords: Ball bearing; Gap size; Load bearing; Lubricant additive; Lubricant minimum film thickness; Lubrication mechanism; Rolling friction; Stribeck curve; Tribology.