Role of interfacial adhesion on minimum wear particle size and roughness evolution


Title

Role of interfacial adhesion on minimum wear particle size and roughness evolution

Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Physical Review E
Volume
102
Issue
4
Date Published
Jan-10-2020
Publication Language
eng
Citation Key
3522
ISSN
2470-0045
Abstract

Adhesion between two bodies is a key parameter in wear processes. At the macroscale, strong adhesive bonds are known to lead to high wear rates, as observed in clean metal-on-metal contact. Reducing the strength of the interfacial adhesion is then desirable, and techniques such as lubrication and surface passivation are employed to this end. Still, little is known about the influence of adhesion on the microscopic processes of wear. In particular, the effects of interfacial adhesion on the wear particle size and on the surface roughness evolution are not clear and are therefore addressed here by means of molecular dynamics simulations. We show that, at short timescales, the surface morphology and not the interfacial adhesion strength dictates the minimum size of wear particles. However, at longer timescales, adhesion alters the particle motion and thus the wear rate and the surface morphology.

Short Title
Phys. Rev. E