Abstract
In what is often called complete lubrication, the kind of lubrication investigated by Towers and Osborne Reynolds, the solid surfaces are completely floated apart by the lubricant. There is, however, another kind of lubrication in which the solid faces are near enough together to influence directly the physical properties of the lubricant. This is the condition found with "dry" or "greasy" surfaces. What Osborne Reynolds calls ”boundary conditions” then operate, and the friction depends not only on the lubricant, but also on the chemical nature of the solid boundaries. Boundary lubrication differs so greatly from complete lubrication as to suggest that there is a discontinuity between the two states. In the former the surfaces have the property of static friction, and the resistance is some inverse function of the viscosity of the lubricant. In complete lubrication static friction is absent and the resistance varies directly with the viscosity of the lubricant. Boundary lubrication is alone considered in this paper. The enquiry is limited to the lubricating qualities of normal paraffins and their related acids and alcohols.The molecules of the substances employed, therefore, consist either of a simple chain of carbon atoms to which are attached atoms of hydrogen, or of such a chain loaded at one end with the hydroxyl group—OH, or the carboxyl group—COOH.
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