| Literature DB >> 31891512 |
Neeraj Dwivedi1, Tarak Patra2, Jae-Bok Lee3, Reuben J Yeo4, Srilok Srinivasan2, Tanmay Dutta5, Kiran Sasikumar2, Chetna Dhand1, Sudhiranjan Tripathy6, Mohammad S M Saifullah6, Aaron Danner5, S A R Hashmi1, A K Srivastava1, Jong-Hyun Ahn3, Subramanian K R S Sankaranarayanan2,7, Hyunsoo Yang5, Charanjit S Bhatia5.
Abstract
Friction and wear remain the primary cause of mechanical energy dissipation and system failure. Recent studies reveal graphene as a powerful solid lubricant to combat friction and wear. Most of these studies have focused on nanoscale tribology and have been limited to a few specific surfaces. Here, we uncover many unknown aspects of graphene's contact-sliding at micro- and macroscopic tribo-scales over a broader range of surfaces. We discover that graphene's performance reduces for surfaces with increasing roughness. To overcome this, we introduce a new type of graphene/silicon nitride (SiNx, 3 nm) bilayer overcoats that exhibit superior performance compared to native graphene sheets (mono and bilayer), that is, display the lowest microscale friction and wear on a range of tribologically poor flat surfaces. More importantly, two-layer graphene/SiNx bilayer lubricant (<4 nm in total thickness) shows the highest macroscale wear durability on tape-head (topologically variant surface) that exceeds most previous thicker (∼7-100 nm) overcoats. Detailed nanoscale characterization and atomistic simulations explain the origin of the reduced friction and wear arising from these nanoscale coatings. Overall, this study demonstrates that engineered graphene-based coatings can outperform conventional coatings in a number of technologies.Entities:
Keywords: Graphene; friction; hybrid coatings; magnetic data storage; wear
Year: 2020 PMID: 31891512 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b03650
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189