Abstract
Wear mechanisms and friction in metals can be investigated by the analysis of the unit event represented by the interaction of a hard particle or asperity with a softer surface. Effective friction is the result of the interaction of many such asperities which constitute the roughness of the harder of the solid surfaces. Three types of plastic deformation at the metal surface can be identified: ploughing, edge formation and chip formation. Each mode of plastic deformation can be analysed using the slip-line field plasticity theory which requires as inputs the geometry of the hard particle and some information on the interface between the harder and the softer surfaces. The classical and the recent chord solution by Oxley assumes a sharp edge sliding against a metal surface but does not consider a curved roughness profile. However, the profiles of real asperities are more like waves with rounded summits. In the present work a new model for the asperities interaction is shown, using the slip-line field theory to calculate the friction forces, depth of sheared layer, average contact pressure and friction coefficient for a cylindrical hard particle sliding over a softer surface. The theoretical results are presented as friction graphs and maps in which the regions of elastic deformations are shown using the Hertz theory while the region of plastic strains is obtained from the present analysis. Present model results are in good agreement with experimental data obtained by Busquet et al. and are quite different from the Oxley chord model for sliding a circular particle.
Published Version
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