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Researchers demonstrate method that reduces friction between two surfaces to almost zero...
05-15-2015 | Bob Yirka

Posted on 05/15/2015 1:36:22 PM PDT by Red Badger

A team of researchers working at Argonne National Laboratory, in Illinois, has found a way to dramatically reduce friction between two macroscopic scale surfaces—to near zero. In their paper published in the journal Science, the team describes how they accidently discovered the method and why they believe it might be useful for real world applications.

As most people are aware, friction causes energy loss and wear and tear on mechanical parts—lubricants such as oil are used to help reduce friction and to dissipate heat, but scientists would really like to find a way to prevent it from happening in the first place. In this new effort, the researchers were studying friction properties at the nanoscale, where it is more about the attractive forces between atoms, than microscopic imperfections that are present at the macroscopic scale. They were testing an idea they had, that if one flat material was coated with graphene and another with a diamond-carbon mixture, there likely would be little friction when one was slid over the other.

In looking at their results they noticed that sometimes they achieved a very low friction coefficient, and sometimes they did not. The difference, they found, came about when tiny diamonds came off the diamond-carbon surface which were then rolled between the two as the sliding ensued. Suspecting they had something, the team tried again, but this time after coating the surfaces, they tossed some nanodiamonds between the two, to serve as tiny ball bearings, then slid one surface over the other and found the friction between them was so low that it qualified as superlubricity.

In taking a closer look at what actually occurred during the sliding, the researchers found that as the nanodiamonds rolled under the graphene, they became coated with flakes (creating what the team calls scrolls) and that was why the friction between the two surfaces remained consistently low for the duration of the sliding. They tested the method under varying conditions, such as changing the sliding speed, the load and the temperature, and found that it worked under a most such condition, with the exception being, high humidity—water gummed up the works. The team believes the method could be used in electronic components, or perhaps in space based applications where environments are carefully controlled.

Schematic of the superlubricity test (not-to-scale). Credit: (c) 2015, Science, DOI: 10.1126/science.1262024

More information: Macroscale superlubricity enabled by graphene nanoscroll formation, Science, DOI: 10.1126/science.1262024

ABSTRACT Friction and wear remain as the primary modes of mechanical energy dissipation in moving mechanical assemblies, thus it is desirable to minimize friction in a number of applications. We demonstrate that superlubricity can be realized at engineering scale when graphene is utilized in combination with nanodiamond particles and diamond-like carbon (DLC). Macroscopic superlubricity originates because graphene patches at a sliding interface wrap around nanodiamonds to form nanoscrolls with reduced contact area that slide against the DLC surface, achieving an incommensurate contact and significantly reduced coefficient of friction (~0.004). Atomistic simulations elucidate the overall mechanism and mesoscopic link bridging the nanoscale mechanics and macroscopic experimental observations.

Journal reference: Science


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Science
KEYWORDS: automobile; bobyirka; carbon; diamond; energy; friction; graphene; industry; nanodiamond; nanodiamonds
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To: Red Badger; All
IF and that is a big if, this can be applied to engines, I think we have something here....

Imagine a 2 stroke not needing any oil, much lower emissions and maybe keep them in the game. Especially if this would work with coated cylinder barrels and pistons, ditto that all bottom end bearings.

A lot of research has been done to make Oil-Free engines in the mid 80's (TACOM Diesels, google it) it worked, but it cost a fortune.

Also, think bearings for Turbine Engines, eliminate one system, i.e. lubrication, especially for the engines that leave and never come home ;-)...

Love to see this tried on ceramics bearings. If the coefficient of Friction is that low that is lower than BAM and Tungsten DiSulfide....

Interesting...

21 posted on 05/15/2015 4:14:08 PM PDT by taildragger (It's Cruz & Walker. Anything else is a Yugo with Racing Stripes....)
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To: Red Badger

Next stop - a perpetual motion machine.....


22 posted on 05/15/2015 6:12:31 PM PDT by Intolerant in NJ
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To: Red Badger

Physics teachers everywhere will rejoice!

“There is a 10 ft ladder that weighs 20 lbs against the wall. The base is two feet from the bottom of the wall. Assume that there is no friction. Calculate the.......”

A substance for use in demonstrations of Physics class ladders and billiard balls problems!


23 posted on 05/15/2015 6:19:14 PM PDT by Pete from Shawnee Mission
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To: Red Badger; Buckeye McFrog; TruthWillWin

24 posted on 05/15/2015 7:12:46 PM PDT by Neidermeyer ("Our courts should not be collection agencies for crooks." — John Waihee, Governor of Hawaii, 1986-)
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