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Détail de l'auteur
Auteur Bikramjit Basu
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur
Affiner la rechercheDoes thermal conductivity play a role in sliding wear of metals in cryogenic environment? / Bikramjit Basu in Transactions of the ASME . Journal of tribology, Vol. 132 N° 4 (Octobre 2010)
[article]
in Transactions of the ASME . Journal of tribology > Vol. 132 N° 4 (Octobre 2010) . - 05 p.
Titre : Does thermal conductivity play a role in sliding wear of metals in cryogenic environment? Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Bikramjit Basu, Auteur ; Amartya Mukhopadhyay, Auteur ; Ankit Mishra, Auteur Année de publication : 2011 Article en page(s) : 05 p. Note générale : Tribology Langues : Anglais (eng) Mots-clés : Abrasion Boiling point Copper Hardness Low-temperature techniques Machine bearings Mechanical contact Sliding friction Steel Thermal conductivity Titanium Index. décimale : 621.5 Energie pneumatique. Machinerie et outils. Réfrigération Résumé : The thermal conductivity of a metallic test piece is one of the principal parameters that influence the temperature buildup at tribocontacts and this normally plays an important role in the unlubricated dry sliding wear of metallic materials. It is, however, not clear whether thermal conductivity is an equally important parameter in the case of wear of metals at cryogenic temperatures, in particular, at liquid nitrogen temperature (LN2) of −196°C. In order to assess the influence of such a physical property of selected nonferrous metals on their tribological behavior in the LN2 environment, we have studied the friction and wear properties of high purity copper (Cu) and titanium (Ti) against the bearing grade steel. These two materials have been processed to produce samples of comparable hardness that have widely different thermal conductivities at room temperature and at test temperature. Wear tests were conducted at three different sliding speeds (0.89 m/s, 1.11 m/s, and 1.34 m/s) under 10 N load, and the friction and wear data were compared. Ti exhibited an order of magnitude higher wear rate (~10−3 mm3/N m) as compared with Cu in identical test conditions. While evidences of abrasive wear and adhesive wear, without any oxidative wear, were found in worn Cu surfaces, worn Ti surfaces showed evidences of significant oxidative wear and mechanical damage of tribolayers. Higher wear rate in Ti appeared to be a result of oxidative wear of Ti, which seemed to be driven by the depletion of LN2 blanket at the tribocontacts under the influence of high flash temperature (14–76°C) as compared with the boiling temperature of LN2 (−196°C). These results demonstrate that the materials with similar hardness subjected to identical LN2 wear test conditions can have significantly different wear rates because of the difference in the flash temperatures, which depend on the thermal conductivity of the test pieces. DEWEY : 621.5 ISSN : 0742-4787 En ligne : http://scitation.aip.org/getabs/servlet/GetabsServlet?prog=normal&id=JOTRE900013 [...] [article] Does thermal conductivity play a role in sliding wear of metals in cryogenic environment? [texte imprimé] / Bikramjit Basu, Auteur ; Amartya Mukhopadhyay, Auteur ; Ankit Mishra, Auteur . - 2011 . - 05 p.
Tribology
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Transactions of the ASME . Journal of tribology > Vol. 132 N° 4 (Octobre 2010) . - 05 p.
Mots-clés : Abrasion Boiling point Copper Hardness Low-temperature techniques Machine bearings Mechanical contact Sliding friction Steel Thermal conductivity Titanium Index. décimale : 621.5 Energie pneumatique. Machinerie et outils. Réfrigération Résumé : The thermal conductivity of a metallic test piece is one of the principal parameters that influence the temperature buildup at tribocontacts and this normally plays an important role in the unlubricated dry sliding wear of metallic materials. It is, however, not clear whether thermal conductivity is an equally important parameter in the case of wear of metals at cryogenic temperatures, in particular, at liquid nitrogen temperature (LN2) of −196°C. In order to assess the influence of such a physical property of selected nonferrous metals on their tribological behavior in the LN2 environment, we have studied the friction and wear properties of high purity copper (Cu) and titanium (Ti) against the bearing grade steel. These two materials have been processed to produce samples of comparable hardness that have widely different thermal conductivities at room temperature and at test temperature. Wear tests were conducted at three different sliding speeds (0.89 m/s, 1.11 m/s, and 1.34 m/s) under 10 N load, and the friction and wear data were compared. Ti exhibited an order of magnitude higher wear rate (~10−3 mm3/N m) as compared with Cu in identical test conditions. While evidences of abrasive wear and adhesive wear, without any oxidative wear, were found in worn Cu surfaces, worn Ti surfaces showed evidences of significant oxidative wear and mechanical damage of tribolayers. Higher wear rate in Ti appeared to be a result of oxidative wear of Ti, which seemed to be driven by the depletion of LN2 blanket at the tribocontacts under the influence of high flash temperature (14–76°C) as compared with the boiling temperature of LN2 (−196°C). These results demonstrate that the materials with similar hardness subjected to identical LN2 wear test conditions can have significantly different wear rates because of the difference in the flash temperatures, which depend on the thermal conductivity of the test pieces. DEWEY : 621.5 ISSN : 0742-4787 En ligne : http://scitation.aip.org/getabs/servlet/GetabsServlet?prog=normal&id=JOTRE900013 [...]