Atomic-to-nanoscale thickness-driven tunable carbon and interface-chemistry immensely control tribo-interface and metal-oxidation

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Atomic-to-nanoscale thickness-driven tunable carbon and interface-chemistry immensely control tribo-interface and metal-oxidation
Title:
Atomic-to-nanoscale thickness-driven tunable carbon and interface-chemistry immensely control tribo-interface and metal-oxidation
Journal Title:
Carbon
Publication Date:
10 December 2024
Citation:
Kumar, R., Bharti, P., Yeo, R. J., Gooh Pattader, P. S., Srivastava, A. K., Sankaranarayanan, S. K. R. S., Dhand, C., & Dwivedi, N. (2025). Atomic-to-nanoscale thickness-driven tunable carbon and interface-chemistry immensely control tribo-interface and metal-oxidation. Carbon, 233, 119912. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.carbon.2024.119912
Abstract:
Bodies in sliding contact experience resistance to motion due to frictional forces, causing huge energy wastage and wear that limit the operational lifetime of the systems. Metal-oxidation is another challenging concern which limit the functionality of the systems. Many approaches have been adopted to minimize frictional forces, wear and metal-oxidation with the use of surface coatings being an effective approach. However, achieving low friction and high wear- and oxidation- resistance with sub-10 nm thick coatings, especially at sub-3 nm thicknesses, remains challenging. Here, we employ ultrathin monolithic carbon overcoats with carbon thicknesses ranging from 0.7–10 nm to demonstrate significant reduction in the friction, wear and metal-oxidation. Additionally, we investigate the efficacy of bilayer overcoats where an atomically thin (~0.4 nm) silicon nitride (SiNx) interlayer is introduced between the substrate and carbon overlayer. We discover that while an ultralow carbon thickness of 0.7 nm could substantially reduce friction and wear, a threshold thickness of carbon-containing higher sp3 carbon bonding is required to maintain high wear resistance and low friction for longer durations, and high metal oxidation protection. The functional properties are well-explained based on carbon microstructure, surface-chemistry, interfacial-bonding, and other fundamental reasons.
License type:
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
Funding Info:
This research was supported by the Department of Science and Technology (DST), India, through the project DST/TDT/AM/2022/253. R.K. acknowledges the Department of Science and Technology (DST), India for providing financial support through the DST INSPIRE Fellowship (IF200509).
Description:
ISSN:
0008-6223
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