Effects of Operating Conditions and Pit Area Ratio on the Coefficient of Friction of Textured Assemblies in Lubricated Reciprocating Sliding.
Slawomir WosWaldemar KoszelaAndrzej DzierwaPawel PawlusPublished in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
The experiment was carried out in a reciprocating lubricated conformal sliding contact between steel discs of the same hardness. The effects of disc surface texturing on the friction coefficient at various operating conditions (temperature, normal load, and frequency of oscillations) were studied. Under various conditions, surface texturing caused friction reductions of sliding pairs. The largest reduction was 4.6 times at a lower temperature and 2.5 times at a higher temperature. The effect of the pit area ratio on the friction reduction was visible at a higher temperature. The highest dimple density of 25% corresponded to a lower coefficient of friction than the smallest density of 9%. The sliding pair with a dimple density of 17% led to large variation of the friction force. At lower temperatures, the coefficients of friction were lower compared to tests at higher temperatures.