Tribological properties of metal-matrix composite materials reinforced by superelastic hard carbon particles


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Abstract

Metal-matrix composite materials (CMs) are synthesized from a mixture of a metal powder (Ti, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Al-based alloy) and fullerenes (10 wt %). The thermobaric synthesis conditions (700–1000°C, 5–8 GPa) ensure the collapse of fullerene molecules and their transformation into superelastic carbon phase particles with an indentation hardness HIT = 10–37 GPa, an elastic modulus EIT = 60–260 GPa, and an elastic recovery of >80% upon indentation. After reinforcing by superelastic hard carbon, the friction coefficient of CM decreases by a factor of 2–4 as compared to the friction coefficient of the matrix metal, and the abrasive wear resistance increases by a factor of 4–200. Superelastic hard carbon particles are a unique reinforcing material for an increase in the wear resistance and a simultaneous decrease in the friction coefficient of CM.

About the authors

I. N. Ushakova

Baikov Institute of Metallurgy and Materials Science

Email: drozdova@imet.ac.ru
Russian Federation, Leninskii pr. 49, Moscow, 119991

E. I. Drozdova

Baikov Institute of Metallurgy and Materials Science

Author for correspondence.
Email: drozdova@imet.ac.ru
Russian Federation, Leninskii pr. 49, Moscow, 119991

O. P. Chernogorova

Baikov Institute of Metallurgy and Materials Science

Email: drozdova@imet.ac.ru
Russian Federation, Leninskii pr. 49, Moscow, 119991

V. M. Blinov

Baikov Institute of Metallurgy and Materials Science

Email: drozdova@imet.ac.ru
Russian Federation, Leninskii pr. 49, Moscow, 119991

E. A. Ekimov

Vereshchagin Institute of High-Pressure Physics

Email: drozdova@imet.ac.ru
Russian Federation, Troitsk, Moscow, 142190


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