Tribology of steel/steel interaction in oil-in-water mulsion; a rationale for lubricity


Autoria(s): Kumar, Deepak; Daniel, Jency; Biswasa, SK
Data(s)

15/05/2010

Resumo

Oil droplets are dispersed in water by an anionic urfactant to form an emulsion. The lubricity of this emulsion in steel/steel interaction is explored in a ball on flat nanotribometer. The droplet size and charge are measured using dynamic light scattering, while the substrate charge density is estimated using the pH titration method. These data are combined to calculate the DLVO forces for the droplets generated for a range of surfactant concentration and two oil to water volume ratios. The droplets have a clear bi-modal size distribution. The study shows that the smaller droplets which experience weak repulsion are situated (at the highest DLVO barrier) much closer to the substrate than thebigger droplets, which experience the same DLVO force, are. We suggest that the smaller droplets thus play a more important role in lubricity than what the bigger droplets do. The largest volume of such small droplets occurs in the 0.5 mM-1 mM range of surfactant concentration and 1% oil to water volume ratio, where the coefficient of friction is also observed to be the least. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/27446/1/yas.pdf

Kumar, Deepak and Daniel, Jency and Biswasa, SK (2010) Tribology of steel/steel interaction in oil-in-water mulsion; a rationale for lubricity. In: Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, 345 (2). pp. 307-315.

Publicador

Elsevier Science

Relação

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2010.01.068

http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/27446/

Palavras-Chave #Mechanical Engineering
Tipo

Journal Article

PeerReviewed