Abstract

Features of the frictional interaction of a sintered Al-30Sn composite, which is used as a coating of bearing inserts, with steel counterbody in the absence of liquid lubricant were studied. The tribological tests were carried out according to the pin-on-disk scheme at room temperature. The friction coefficient μ of the friction pair is increased up to approximately 0.6 during the running-in process. Its growth stops when the stage of steady state friction begins, and then μ fluctuates around some relatively high and constant value. The study of the friction surfaces of the friction pair showed that the aforementioned increase in μ is due to the formation of a discrete transferred layer on the friction track surface and strain hardening of the subsurface layer of the Al-30Sn sample under the action of hard particles of the transferred layer. It was established that tin is transferred on the friction track surface mainly in a composition of wear particles, despite the high content of the solid lubricant in the investigated samples. The wear intensity of the samples subjected to processing by equal channel angular pressing with route A is much lower than that of the sintered (unprocessed) ones. The main wear mechanism of Al-30Sn composites under dry friction against steel is a delamination of the highly deformed subsurface aluminum grains along their interphase boundaries.

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