Affiliation:
1. Industrial Engineering Department, Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, Tshwane University of Technology, Private Bag X680, Pretoria 0001, South Africa
2. Chemical, Materials and Metallurgy Department, Botswana International University of Science and Technology (BIUST), Private Bag 16, Palapye Plot 10071, Botswana
Abstract
Titanium carbide materials are introduced into manufacturing industries for the reinforcement and surface protection of base materials due to their substantial ability to withstand severe environments, which include sliding wear, corrosion, and mechanical failures. A thin film of titanium carbide (TiC) is coated onto brass and copper substrates using the radio frequency magnetron sputtering (RFMS) deposition method. The coating process is carried out at constant processing parameters, which include a sputtering power of 200 W, a temperature of 80 °C, a deposition time of 180 min, and an argon (Ar) gas flow rate at 10 standard cubic centimetres per minute (SCCM). The coating, together with the base materials, is modelled and its behaviours are simulated using ANSYS Workbench R19.2 Academic, supported by Mechanical APDL solver for nonlinear finite element analysis (FEA). The deformation, equivalent stress–strain characteristics, and elastic–plastic properties of the coating are determined at applied loads of 60 N and 25 N and coefficients of friction (CoF) of 0.25 and 0.38 for the thin film deposition on brass and copper substrates. The sliding distance and the speed of the alloy steel ball used during the sliding wear operation are found to be 3 mm and 4 mm/s, respectively. The sliding wear modelling and simulation process are, however, designed for the ball-on-flat (BoF) wear technique with a dry sliding approach. Therefore, BoF wear simulations are also performed on titanium carbide–brass (TiC-Br) and titanium carbide–copper (TiC-Cu) conjugates for the evaluation of surface engineering applications such as cutting tools and in automotive, aerospace, thermomechanical, and biomedical fields. The ball used for the FEA wear simulation is made from alloy steel material (AISI 52100) with a radius of 3.175 mm.
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