Stress-augmented thermal activation: Tribology feels the force

Abstract In stress-augmented thermal activation, the activation energy barrier that controls the rate of atomic and molecular processes is reduced by the application of stress, with the result that the rate of these processes increases exponentially with applied stress. This concept has particular r...

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Main Author: Hugh Spikes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2018-02-01
Series:Friction
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40544-018-0201-2
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spelling doaj-f166957313bc49d6bcbd7d32704caf9a2020-11-24T21:21:42ZengSpringerOpenFriction2223-76902223-77042018-02-016113110.1007/s40544-018-0201-2Stress-augmented thermal activation: Tribology feels the forceHugh Spikes0Tribology Group, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Imperial CollegeAbstract In stress-augmented thermal activation, the activation energy barrier that controls the rate of atomic and molecular processes is reduced by the application of stress, with the result that the rate of these processes increases exponentially with applied stress. This concept has particular relevance to Tribology, and since its development in the early twentieth century, it has been applied to develop important models of plastic flow, sliding friction, rheology, wear, and tribochemistry. This paper reviews the development of stress-augmented thermal activation and its application to all of these areas of Tribology. The strengths and limitations of the approach are then discussed and future directions considered. From the scientific point of view, the concept of stress-augmented thermal activation is important since it enables the development of models that describe macroscale tribological performance, such as friction coefficient or tribofilm formation, in terms of the structure and behaviour of individual atoms and molecules. This both helps us understand these processes at a fundamental level and also provides tools for the informed design of lubricants and surfaces.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40544-018-0201-2stress activationstress augmented thermal activationmechanochemistryfrictionEHD frictionwear
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hugh Spikes
spellingShingle Hugh Spikes
Stress-augmented thermal activation: Tribology feels the force
Friction
stress activation
stress augmented thermal activation
mechanochemistry
friction
EHD friction
wear
author_facet Hugh Spikes
author_sort Hugh Spikes
title Stress-augmented thermal activation: Tribology feels the force
title_short Stress-augmented thermal activation: Tribology feels the force
title_full Stress-augmented thermal activation: Tribology feels the force
title_fullStr Stress-augmented thermal activation: Tribology feels the force
title_full_unstemmed Stress-augmented thermal activation: Tribology feels the force
title_sort stress-augmented thermal activation: tribology feels the force
publisher SpringerOpen
series Friction
issn 2223-7690
2223-7704
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Abstract In stress-augmented thermal activation, the activation energy barrier that controls the rate of atomic and molecular processes is reduced by the application of stress, with the result that the rate of these processes increases exponentially with applied stress. This concept has particular relevance to Tribology, and since its development in the early twentieth century, it has been applied to develop important models of plastic flow, sliding friction, rheology, wear, and tribochemistry. This paper reviews the development of stress-augmented thermal activation and its application to all of these areas of Tribology. The strengths and limitations of the approach are then discussed and future directions considered. From the scientific point of view, the concept of stress-augmented thermal activation is important since it enables the development of models that describe macroscale tribological performance, such as friction coefficient or tribofilm formation, in terms of the structure and behaviour of individual atoms and molecules. This both helps us understand these processes at a fundamental level and also provides tools for the informed design of lubricants and surfaces.
topic stress activation
stress augmented thermal activation
mechanochemistry
friction
EHD friction
wear
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40544-018-0201-2
work_keys_str_mv AT hughspikes stressaugmentedthermalactivationtribologyfeelstheforce
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