A shear localization mechanism for lubricity of amorphous carbon materials.

Sci Rep

State Key Laboratory of Tribology, Tsinghua University, 100084 Beijing, China.

Published: January 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • Amorphous carbon is highly lubricious, but its lubrication mechanism was not well understood until now.
  • The study suggests that lubricity comes from shear-induced strain localization, rather than chemical passivation of dangling bonds as previously thought.
  • The research also reveals that pressure can cause a transition from stick-slip friction to continuous sliding with ultra-low friction through the clustering of graphitic sheets in the friction layer.

Article Abstract

Amorphous carbon is one of the most lubricious materials known, but the mechanism is not well understood. It is counterintuitive that such a strong covalent solid could exhibit exceptional lubricity. A prevailing view is that lubricity of amorphous carbon results from chemical passivation of dangling bonds on surfaces. Here we show instead that lubricity arises from shear induced strain localization, which, instead of homogeneous deformation, dominates the shearing process. Shear localization is characterized by covalent bond reorientation, phase transformation and structural ordering preferentially in a localized region, namely tribolayer, resulting in shear weakening. We further demonstrate an anomalous pressure induced transition from stick-slip friction to continuous sliding with ultralow friction, due to gradual clustering and layering of graphitic sheets in the tribolayer. The proposed shear localization mechanism sheds light on the mechanism of superlubricity, and would enrich our understanding of lubrication mechanism of a wide variety of amorphous materials.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3888979PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep03662DOI Listing

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