Superlubricitive engineering—Future industry nearly getting rid of wear and frictional energy consumption

Abstract Superlubricity has been developing very rapidly in recent years as a new and important area in tribology. Many new phenomena and materials, as well as some new mechanisms in both liquid and solid superlubricity have been obtained. In liquid superlubricity, tens of new kinds of liquids with...

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Main Authors: Jianbin Luo, Xiang Zhou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2020-06-01
Series:Friction
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40544-020-0393-0
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spelling doaj-e82272cdd8fc451ba6317227afbd83c92020-11-25T03:12:04ZengSpringerOpenFriction2223-76902223-77042020-06-018464366510.1007/s40544-020-0393-0Superlubricitive engineering—Future industry nearly getting rid of wear and frictional energy consumptionJianbin Luo0Xiang Zhou1State Key Laboratory of Tribology, Tsinghua UniversityState Key Laboratory of Tribology, Tsinghua UniversityAbstract Superlubricity has been developing very rapidly in recent years as a new and important area in tribology. Many new phenomena and materials, as well as some new mechanisms in both liquid and solid superlubricity have been obtained. In liquid superlubricity, tens of new kinds of liquids with superlubricity have been found (e.g., water-based liquids, oil-based lubricants, and liquids combined with additives of two-dimensional (2D) materials that exhibit very good superlubricity properties under high pressure). In the field of solid superlubricity, more materials with superlubricity have been observed, including graphene-to-graphene surfaces, highly oriented pyrolytic graphite to graphene surfaces, and heterostructure surfaces where a friction coefficient as low as 0.00004 has been obtained. However, superlubricity is still under laboratory research. What is the future of superlubricity? What is the barrier restricting superlubricity from industrial applications? How do we transfer superlubricity from scientific research to industrial application? These questions and application fields of superlubricity in near future have been analyzed, and the concept of “superlubricitive engineering” has been proposed in the present work.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40544-020-0393-0superlubricitive engineeringsuperlubricityliquid superlubricitysolid superlubricitytwo-dimensional (2D) materiallubrication
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jianbin Luo
Xiang Zhou
spellingShingle Jianbin Luo
Xiang Zhou
Superlubricitive engineering—Future industry nearly getting rid of wear and frictional energy consumption
Friction
superlubricitive engineering
superlubricity
liquid superlubricity
solid superlubricity
two-dimensional (2D) material
lubrication
author_facet Jianbin Luo
Xiang Zhou
author_sort Jianbin Luo
title Superlubricitive engineering—Future industry nearly getting rid of wear and frictional energy consumption
title_short Superlubricitive engineering—Future industry nearly getting rid of wear and frictional energy consumption
title_full Superlubricitive engineering—Future industry nearly getting rid of wear and frictional energy consumption
title_fullStr Superlubricitive engineering—Future industry nearly getting rid of wear and frictional energy consumption
title_full_unstemmed Superlubricitive engineering—Future industry nearly getting rid of wear and frictional energy consumption
title_sort superlubricitive engineering—future industry nearly getting rid of wear and frictional energy consumption
publisher SpringerOpen
series Friction
issn 2223-7690
2223-7704
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Abstract Superlubricity has been developing very rapidly in recent years as a new and important area in tribology. Many new phenomena and materials, as well as some new mechanisms in both liquid and solid superlubricity have been obtained. In liquid superlubricity, tens of new kinds of liquids with superlubricity have been found (e.g., water-based liquids, oil-based lubricants, and liquids combined with additives of two-dimensional (2D) materials that exhibit very good superlubricity properties under high pressure). In the field of solid superlubricity, more materials with superlubricity have been observed, including graphene-to-graphene surfaces, highly oriented pyrolytic graphite to graphene surfaces, and heterostructure surfaces where a friction coefficient as low as 0.00004 has been obtained. However, superlubricity is still under laboratory research. What is the future of superlubricity? What is the barrier restricting superlubricity from industrial applications? How do we transfer superlubricity from scientific research to industrial application? These questions and application fields of superlubricity in near future have been analyzed, and the concept of “superlubricitive engineering” has been proposed in the present work.
topic superlubricitive engineering
superlubricity
liquid superlubricity
solid superlubricity
two-dimensional (2D) material
lubrication
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40544-020-0393-0
work_keys_str_mv AT jianbinluo superlubricitiveengineeringfutureindustrynearlygettingridofwearandfrictionalenergyconsumption
AT xiangzhou superlubricitiveengineeringfutureindustrynearlygettingridofwearandfrictionalenergyconsumption
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