Abstract

Friction and wear experiments were performed on carbon fiber-reinforced polymer (CFRP) composites, and the tribological behavior of these materials under boundary lubrication (based on the 5100 4T 10 W-30 engine oil with TiO2 Degussa P25 nanoparticles) was investigated. Experiments were carried out in two directions: one at a different normal load from 6 to 16 N and one at a low sliding speed of 110 mm/min under boundary lubrication conditions. The obtained results reveal the stick-slip effect and the static and dynamic coefficient of friction decreased slightly with increasing normal applied load on the carbon fiber reinforced polymer composite pairs. The second direction highlights through experimental tests on the pin on disc tribometer that the friction coefficient increases with the increase in normal load (20–80 N) and sliding velocity (0.4–2.4 m/s). On the other hand, it is found that the friction coefficient is slightly lower than in the stick-slip phase. During the running-in process, the friction coefficient of the CFRP pair increases steadily as the rubbing time increases, and after a certain rubbing period, it remains constant regardless of the material of the counter face. The obtained results show that for the observed interval, the influence of normal load and sliding velocity have relatively small fraction coefficients and low wear depths. A 3D analysis of the profile demonstrated the texture of wear marks and tracks of these engineering composite materials. Furthermore, the height variations of wear marks and the morphologies of the worn surfaces of specimens under boundary lubrication conditions were analyzed.

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