Reprint

Tribology of 2D Nanomaterials

Edited by
August 2024
196 pages
  • ISBN978-3-7258-1850-1 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-7258-1849-5 (PDF)

This is a Reprint of the Special Issue Tribology of 2D Nanomaterials that was published in

Chemistry & Materials Science
Engineering
Summary

Friction and wear between machine pairs always cause excessive energy losses and even mechanical failures in industrial applications. To overcome these problems, researchers have focused on enhancing the performance of lubricants, particularly with regard to reductions in energy dissipation and improved durability. Recently, many 2D materials were used as solid lubricants at the nano/microscales or macroscales, applied as composite fillers, or added to lubricants as additives to enhance lubrication and wear protection performances. These 2D materials exhibit different tribological behaviors, which are valuable to investigate for the development of novel lubrication systems. This reprint is aimed at the most recent discoveries in the tribology of 2D nanomaterials in research and industry.

Format
  • Hardback
License and Copyright
© 2024 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
graphene; friction; wear; additive; graphene-oil nanofluids; heated and non-heated; tribological properties; graphene surface modification; biological lubrication additives; artificial joint; carbon nanomaterials; lubrication; antioxidation; nanofluid; yawed cylinder; mixed convection; convective heat condition; nano-additives; gear lubricant; TEM; FESEM; wear; surfactant; attapulgite; lubricant additive; electric-brush plated Ni coating; tribological properties; MoS2-based coating; rare element doping; tribology performance; working gas flow; graphene lubricant; friction and wear properties; roughness; lubrication characteristics; gas to liquid; lubricating oil; lubricating performance; layered double hydroxide; hydrogel; 2D nanomaterial; mechanical strength; lubrication behavior; nanofiller; van der Waals heterostructure; WS2/h-BN; electrostatic interaction; layer-by-layer self-assembly; tribological property; n/a