Abstract

Friction and endurance of five powdered solid lubricants were studied on a pin and ring machine. Simple methods were developed to produce layers of constant thickness (1 μm). The ease of rubbing-in varies widely with structure and with particle size. Ease of layer formation is completely unrelated to endurance: NbSe2 is rubbed in readily, but is rubbed off directly on loading. Layers of constant thickness from MoS2, WS2, and WSe2 powders behave roughly similarly, but MoS2 has a much longer life. The lubricant films are gradually destroyed by oxidation and therefore endurance increases in the series oxygen, air, and nitrogen (with 100 p.p.m. oxygen). The process of lubricant degradation is the same for the synthetic crystalline powders as found previously for MoS2: blistering of the run-in film surface on release of loading. Oxygen accelerates this process, leading finally to descaling and the onset of seizure. The endurance of MoSe2 goes through a pronounced maximum in oxygen–nitrogen mixtures. It is suggested that oxygen plays a dual role, first by enhancing film formation, and second by causing oxidative embrittlement of the lubricant.

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