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Toward a continuum description of lubrication in highly pressurized nanometer-wide constrictions: The importance of accurate slip laws

Andrea Codrignani, Stefan Peeters, Hannes Holey, Franziska Stief, Daniele Savio, Lars Pastewka, Gianpietro Moras, Kerstin Falk, Michael Moseler

2023Science Advances24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The Reynolds lubrication equation (RLE) is widely used to design sliding contacts in mechanical machinery. While providing an excellent description of hydrodynamic lubrication, friction in boundary lubrication regions is usually considered by empirical laws, because continuum theories are expected to fail for lubricant film heights h 0 ≪ 10 nm, especially in highly loaded tribosystems with normal pressures p n ≫ 0.1 GPa. Here, the performance of RLEs is validated by molecular dynamics simulations of pressurized (with p n = 0.2 to 1 GPa) hexadecane in a gold converging-diverging channel with minimum gap heights h 0 = 1.4 to 9.7 nm. For p n ≤ 0.4 GPa and h 0 ≥ 5 nm, agreement with the RLE requires accurate constitutive laws for pressure-dependent density and viscosity. An additional nonlinear wall slip law relating wall slip velocities to local shear stresses extends the RLE’s validity to even the most severe loading condition p n = 1 GPa and h 0 = 1.4 nm. Our results demonstrate an innovative route for continuum modeling of highly loaded tribological contacts under boundary lubrication.

Topics & Concepts

LubricationSlip (aerodynamics)MechanicsMaterials scienceTribologyLubricantNonlinear systemReynolds equationLubrication theoryLawThermodynamicsComposite materialReynolds numberPhysicsPolitical scienceTurbulenceQuantum mechanicsForce Microscopy Techniques and ApplicationsLubricants and Their AdditivesAdhesion, Friction, and Surface Interactions
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