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80897

INFLUENCE OF MAGNETIC FIELD ON FRICTION COEFFICIENT DISPLAYED BY THE OIL LUBRICATED SLIDING OF STEEL

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Last updated: 25 Dec 2024

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Abstract

ABSTRACT
The present work investigates the influence of magnetic field on the friction coefficient displayed by sliding of steel pin on aluminium, steel and polyamide discs. The sliding surfaces were lubricated by paraffin oil and dispersed by different lubricant additives such as zinc dialkyldithiophosphates (ZDDP), molybdenum disulphide (MoS2), heteropolar organic based additive (CMOC), graphite (C), detergent additive (calcium sulphonate) (DA), polytetrafluroethylene (PTFE) and polymethyl methacrylate  (PMMA).
 
The experiments showed that, aluminium as a paramagnetic material recorded higher values of friction coefficient than steel and polyamide. That observation confirms that in spite of the increase of the attractive force generated from the magnetic field for steel/steel and the electrostatic charge for polyamide/steel, oil molecules were more adhered into the surfaces of steel and polyamide than aluminium and consequently friction coefficient significantly decreased. When the oil was dispersed by additives, it was found that, friction coefficient slightly increased with increasing magnetic field for oil dispersed by ZDDP additive.  For oil dispersed by MoS2 friction coefficient displayed by aluminium disc showed relatively lower values in the presence of the magnetic field than that displayed by polyamide and steel discs. Magnetic field drastically decreased friction coefficient displayed by aluminium and steel disc. As for polyamide disc friction coefficient slightly increased with increasing the magnetic field.
 
Aluminium disc displayed the lowest friction coefficient in the presence of C, which decreased with increasing magnetic field. For steel disc friction coefficient displayed the highest values. Polyamide disc showed no change in friction values as the intensity of the magnetic field increased. For oil dispersed by DA, steel disc showed significant friction decrease. Aluminium disc showed slight friction increase with increasing magnetic field, while polyamide disc showed slight friction decrease. PTFE particles dispersed in the oil were much influenced by the magnetic field, where the friction coefficient displayed by steel drastically decreased with increasing magnetic field. Aluminium and polyamide discs showed an increasing trend as the magnetic field increased. As for PMMA particles dispersed in oil aluminium disc showed slight friction increase, while steel and polyamide discs gave decreasing trend of friction as the magnetic field increased.
 

DOI

10.21608/jest.2012.80897

Keywords

magnetic field, Friction coefficient, steel, aluminium, polyamide, oil additives, polytetrafluroethylene, polymethyl methacrylate, molybdenum disulphide, zinc dialkyldithiophosphates and graphite

Authors

First Name

H.

Last Name

Zaini

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Affiliation

Faculty of Engineering, Taif University, Al-Taif, SAUDI ARABIA.

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First Name

A.

Last Name

Alahmadi

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Faculty of Engineering, Taif University, Al-Taif, SAUDI ARABIA.

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Orcid

-

First Name

W. Y.

Last Name

Ali

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Faculty of Engineering, Taif University, Al-Taif, SAUDI ARABIA.

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-

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-

Orcid

-

First Name

S.

Last Name

Abdel-Sattar

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Faculty of Engineering, Taif University, Al-Taif, SAUDI ARABIA.

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Volume

9

Article Issue

2

Related Issue

12131

Issue Date

2012-04-01

Receive Date

2012-01-04

Publish Date

2012-04-01

Page Start

29

Page End

42

Print ISSN

2090-5882

Online ISSN

2090-5955

Link

https://jest.journals.ekb.eg/article_80897.html

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https://jest.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=80897

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3

Type

Original Article

Type Code

1,211

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Journal of the Egyptian Society of Tribology

Publication Link

https://jest.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

INFLUENCE OF MAGNETIC FIELD ON FRICTION COEFFICIENT DISPLAYED BY THE OIL LUBRICATED SLIDING OF STEEL

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Article

Created At

25 Dec 2024