Anchor Group Bottlebrush Polymers as Oil Additive Friction Modifiers.
Andrew KerrSatu HäkkinenStephen C L HallPaul KirkmanPaul O'HoraTimothy SmithChristy John KinaneAndrew John CaruanaSebastien PerrierPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
Surface-tethered polymers have been shown to be an efficient lubrication strategy for boundary and mixed lubrication by providing a solvated film between solid surfaces. We have assessed the performance of various graft copolymers as friction modifier additives in oil and revealed important structure-property relationships for this application. The polymers consisted of an oil-soluble, grafted poly(lauryl acrylate) segment and a polar, linear poly(4-acryloylmorpholine) anchor group. Reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer polymerization was used to access various architectures with control of the grafting density and position of the anchor group. Macrotribological studies displayed promising results with ≈50% reduction in friction coefficient at low polymer treatment rates. QCM-D experiments, neutron reflectometry, small-angle neutron scattering, and atomic force microscopy were used to gather detailed information on these polymers' surface adsorption characteristics, film structure, and solution behavior.