Abstract

The application of Cu-graphite composites in the field of friction materials is limited by the poor wettability between Cu and graphite and weakened mechanical properties. In this work, in-situ TiC layers were generated by interfacial resistance sintering with direct current to manipulate the interfacial bonding of the composites and enhance their comprehensive properties. The Ti added to the composites would react with graphite at the interface to generate TiC layers and form strong Cu–TiC-graphite interfaces due to interfacial reactions. When the added Ti content is 6 wt%, the composite demonstrates the most excellent mechanical properties and tribological characteristics, i.e., yield strength (168 MPa) and wear rate (2.7 × 10−10 m2/N) are 93.1% higher and 29.7% lower than those of the Cu-graphite composite without Ti addition, respectively. The dense TiC layer induces the strengthening of the Cu matrix and serves as the reinforcing phase to optimize the interfacial bonding and stress transfer, which not only greatly enhances the mechanical properties of the composite but also enables the composite to take full advantage of the hard TiC and graphite phases to obtain stable friction coefficient and low wear rate. This work provides a simpler technique to prepare modified Cu-graphite composites with excellent performance and contributes to the in-depth understanding of the enhancement mechanism of hard ceramic layers on the mechanical and tribological properties of composites.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call