Abstract

Liquid lubricants used in mechanical applications are low-vapor-pressure hydrocarbons modified with a small quantity of polar compounds. The polar modifiers adsorbed on the surface of sliding solids dominate the friction properties when the sliding surfaces are in close proximity. However, a few methods are available for the characterization of the adsorbed modifiers of a nanometer-scale thickness. In this study, we applied frequency-modulation atomic force microscopy to evaluate the vertical and lateral density distributions of the adsorbed modifier in a real lubricant, namely, poly-α-olefin (PAO) modified with an orthophosphoric acid oleyl ester. The liquid-induced force on the probing tip was mapped on a plane that was perpendicular to the lubricant–iron interface with a force sensitivity on the order of 10 pN. The PAO in the absence of the ester modifier was directly exposed to the film, which produced a few liquid layers parallel to the film surface with layer-to-layer distances of 0.6–0.7 nm. A monomolecular layer of the modifier was intermittently adsorbed with increasing ester concentration in the bulk lubricant, with complete coverage seen at 20 ppm. The C18H35 chains of the oleyl esters fluctuating in the lubricant produced a repulsive force on the tip, which monotonically decayed with the tip-to-surface distance. The dynamic friction coefficient of sliding steel–lubricant–steel interfaces, which was separately determined using a friction tester, was compared with the force map determined on the iron film immersed in the corresponding lubricant. The complete monomolecular layer of the ester modifier on the static lubricant–iron boundary is a requirement for achieving smooth and stable friction at the sliding interface.

Highlights

  • Most liquid lubricants used in mechanical applications are lowvapor-pressure hydrocarbons modified with a small quantity of polar compounds

  • Force mapping in the lubricants was further examined using graphite wafers to support the interpretation of the C18AP layer deposition on the iron films

  • We demonstrated the feasibility of using frequency-modulation atomic force microscopy (FM-AFM) for mechanically probing a lubricant−solid interface, C18APcontaining PAO covering the iron films

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Summary

Introduction

Most liquid lubricants used in mechanical applications are lowvapor-pressure hydrocarbons modified with a small quantity of polar compounds. The decay length, which was defined as the tip-to-surface distance resulting in zero force, was estimated to be 0.6, 0.9, and 2.0 nm, corresponding to C18AP concentrations of 0.2, 2, and 20 ppm, respectively. Force mapping facilitated the quantification of the vertical and lateral distributions of the C18AP layers having a fluctuating, dynamic boundary with the liquid PAO.

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