A Chemical Potential Equation for Modeling Triboelectrochemical Reactions on Solid–Liquid Interfaces

Triboelectrochemical reactions occur on solid–liquid interfaces in wide range of applications when an electric field strong enough and a frictional stress high enough are simultaneously imposed on the interfaces. A characteristic of triboelectrochemical reactions is that not only the thermal energy...

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Main Authors: Chenxu Liu, Yu Tian, Yonggang Meng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-04-01
Series:Frontiers in Chemistry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fchem.2021.650880/full
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spelling doaj-571d6ce0f1d04cddba41131248422e622021-04-23T07:26:02ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Chemistry2296-26462021-04-01910.3389/fchem.2021.650880650880A Chemical Potential Equation for Modeling Triboelectrochemical Reactions on Solid–Liquid InterfacesChenxu LiuYu TianYonggang MengTriboelectrochemical reactions occur on solid–liquid interfaces in wide range of applications when an electric field strong enough and a frictional stress high enough are simultaneously imposed on the interfaces. A characteristic of triboelectrochemical reactions is that not only the thermal energy but also the electrical and mechanical energies can activate, assist, or mitigate the solid–liquid interface chemical reactions, the products of which affect electrical and tribological behavior of the interfaces inversely. In previous studies, we have found that the coupling of frictional and electric effects could physically change the migration, adsorption, and desorption behaviors of the polar molecules, ions, or charged particles included in aqueous or nonaqueous base lubricant toward or away from the interfaces and thus control the boundary lubrication. Recently, we have found that the friction coefficient and surface appearance of some kinds of metals could also be modulated to some extent even in pure water or pure base oils under external electric stimulations. We attribute these changes to the triboelectrochemical reactions occurred when a strong external electric field is imposed on. Based on the effective collision model of chemical reactions, a chemical potential equation, which includes both electrical and mechanical contributions, has been derived. The proposed chemical potential equation can be used to explain the observed triboelectrochemical phenomenon in experiments. Based on the model, a novel method for oxidation coloring of the selected areas in metal surfaces is proposed. Together with the physical adsorption and desorption model of lubricant additives, the triboelectrochemical reaction model can well explain the phenomena of potential-controlled boundary lubrication in different lubrication systems and also provides a theoretical basis for other solid–liquid interface processes under the effects of electromechanical coupling.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fchem.2021.650880/fulltriboeletrochemistryadsorption/desorptionsolid–liquid interfaceboundary lubricationpotential control
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chenxu Liu
Yu Tian
Yonggang Meng
spellingShingle Chenxu Liu
Yu Tian
Yonggang Meng
A Chemical Potential Equation for Modeling Triboelectrochemical Reactions on Solid–Liquid Interfaces
Frontiers in Chemistry
triboeletrochemistry
adsorption/desorption
solid–liquid interface
boundary lubrication
potential control
author_facet Chenxu Liu
Yu Tian
Yonggang Meng
author_sort Chenxu Liu
title A Chemical Potential Equation for Modeling Triboelectrochemical Reactions on Solid–Liquid Interfaces
title_short A Chemical Potential Equation for Modeling Triboelectrochemical Reactions on Solid–Liquid Interfaces
title_full A Chemical Potential Equation for Modeling Triboelectrochemical Reactions on Solid–Liquid Interfaces
title_fullStr A Chemical Potential Equation for Modeling Triboelectrochemical Reactions on Solid–Liquid Interfaces
title_full_unstemmed A Chemical Potential Equation for Modeling Triboelectrochemical Reactions on Solid–Liquid Interfaces
title_sort chemical potential equation for modeling triboelectrochemical reactions on solid–liquid interfaces
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Chemistry
issn 2296-2646
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Triboelectrochemical reactions occur on solid–liquid interfaces in wide range of applications when an electric field strong enough and a frictional stress high enough are simultaneously imposed on the interfaces. A characteristic of triboelectrochemical reactions is that not only the thermal energy but also the electrical and mechanical energies can activate, assist, or mitigate the solid–liquid interface chemical reactions, the products of which affect electrical and tribological behavior of the interfaces inversely. In previous studies, we have found that the coupling of frictional and electric effects could physically change the migration, adsorption, and desorption behaviors of the polar molecules, ions, or charged particles included in aqueous or nonaqueous base lubricant toward or away from the interfaces and thus control the boundary lubrication. Recently, we have found that the friction coefficient and surface appearance of some kinds of metals could also be modulated to some extent even in pure water or pure base oils under external electric stimulations. We attribute these changes to the triboelectrochemical reactions occurred when a strong external electric field is imposed on. Based on the effective collision model of chemical reactions, a chemical potential equation, which includes both electrical and mechanical contributions, has been derived. The proposed chemical potential equation can be used to explain the observed triboelectrochemical phenomenon in experiments. Based on the model, a novel method for oxidation coloring of the selected areas in metal surfaces is proposed. Together with the physical adsorption and desorption model of lubricant additives, the triboelectrochemical reaction model can well explain the phenomena of potential-controlled boundary lubrication in different lubrication systems and also provides a theoretical basis for other solid–liquid interface processes under the effects of electromechanical coupling.
topic triboeletrochemistry
adsorption/desorption
solid–liquid interface
boundary lubrication
potential control
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fchem.2021.650880/full
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