Affiliation:
1. Tribology Research Institute State Key Laboratory of Traction Power School of Mechanical Engineering Southwest Jiaotong University 610031 Chengdu China
2. Department of Mechanical Engineering University of California Merced CA 95343 USA
3. Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Research Institute Pennsylvania State University University Park PA 16802 USA
4. Institute of Fundamental and Frontier Sciences and State Key Laboratory of Electronic Thin Film and Integrated Devices University of Electronic Science and Technology of China 610054 Chengdu China
Abstract
AbstractTwo‐dimensional (2D) lamellar materials are normally capable of rendering super‐low friction, wear protection, and adhesion reduction in nanoscale due to their ultralow shear strength between two basal plane surfaces. However, high friction at step edges prevents the 2D materials from achieving super‐low friction in macroscale applications and eventually leads to failure of lubrication performance. Here, taking graphene as an example, the authors report that not all step edges are detrimental. The armchair (AC) step edges are found to have only a minor topographic effect on friction, while the zigzag (ZZ) edges cause friction two orders of magnitude larger than the basal plane. The AC step edge is less reactive and thus more durable. However, the ZZ structure prevails when step edges are produced mechanically, for example, through mechanical exfoliation or grinding of graphite. The authors found a way to make the high‐friction ZZ edge superlubricious by reconstructing the (6,6) hexagon structure to the (5,7) azulene‐like structure through thermal annealing in an inert gas environment. This will facilitate the realization of graphene‐based superlubricity over a wide range of industrial applications in which avoiding the involvement of step edges is difficult.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities
Subject
Biomaterials,Biotechnology,General Materials Science,General Chemistry
Cited by
10 articles.
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