Abstract

The paper investigates the effect of bulk and surface modification on the adhesive and tribological properties of ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) and shows that bulk modification with nano- and micro-sized modifiers (montmorillonite, shungite, exfoliated graphite) mainly reduces the friction coefficient but leads to a decrease in the wear resistance of the corresponding composites. It is found that gas-phase surface fluorination provides an increase in the wear resistance of experimental samples in all cases due to a combination of nanotexturing and chemomorphological transformations of the surface layers of the modified polymers. The significant dependence of the nanotexture on the technique and mode of modification is demonstrated using the original approaches to the quantitative characterization of the experimental samples’ surfaces’ scanning electron microscopy-images (formed with the scanning electron microscope). It is shown that the surface fluorination not only makes possible to significantly compensate for the increase of the friction coefficient of bulk-modified UHMWPE in comparison with the original one but also provides a nonlinear multiplicative increase in the wear resistance.

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