Green Tribology

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
T.V.V.L.N. Rao ◽  
Salmiah Binti Kasolang ◽  
Xie Guoxin ◽  
Jitendra Kumar Katiyar ◽  
Ahmad Majdi Abdul Rani
Keyword(s):  
2012 ◽  
pp. 978-981
Author(s):  
Yuehai Yang ◽  
Wenzhi Li ◽  
Elmar Kroner ◽  
Eduard Arzt ◽  
Bharat Bhushan ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2016 ◽  
pp. 1377-1380
Author(s):  
Michael Nosonovsky ◽  
Bharat Bhushan
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Michael Nosonovsky

“Green tribology” is the concept that was introduced in 2009 by the founder of Tribology, Prof. P. Jost, who defined it as “the science and technology of the tribological aspects of ecological balance and of environmental and biological impacts.” This includes tribological technology that mimics living nature (biomimetic surfaces) and thus is expected to be environment-friendly, the control of friction and wear that is of importance for energy conservation and conversion, environmental aspects of lubrication and surface modification techniques, and tribological aspects of green applications such as the wind-power turbines, tidal turbines, or solar panels. It is clear that a number of tribological problems could be put under the umbrella of “green tribology” and is of mutual benefit to one another. Biomimetic applications are of particular interest for the Green Tribology, because of their environment-friendliness. Nosonovsky and Bhushan suggested the “12 principles of the Green Tribology.” The common feature in various biomimetic surfaces is their hierarchical structure and the ability for self-organization. I will discuss the principles of self-organization in hierarchical tribological systems on the basis of the concepts of the non-equilibrium thermodynamics (the Onsager formalism). In particular, I will show that the thermodynamic approach in tribology can yield new and practically important results.


2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-15
Author(s):  
І. Mandzyuk ◽  
К. Prysiazhna

The possibility of obtaining a new class of lubricating oil bodies (PET-acylglycerol) with the help of modification of the natural fat molecule by a fragment of a link of a synthetic polymer-polyethylene terephthalate is considered. The distribution of electrostatic charge in molecules of beef fat and synthesized PET-acylglycerol is shown. A relationship between the structural hierarchy of the synthesized lubricating oil bodies and the tribotechnical indexes has been established.


Author(s):  
Nguyen Van Minh ◽  
Alexander Kuzharov ◽  
Le Hai Ninh ◽  
Nguyen Huynh ◽  
Andrey Kuzharov

This chapter provides an overview of Green tribology, which is a new direction in the development of tribology, a new interesting area for scientific researches and a new way to turn tribology into a friend of ecological environment and saving energy. Green tribology is considered as well as close area with other “green” disciplines like green engineering and green chemistry. In the chapter, the various aspects of green tribology such as the concept, perspectives, role and goal, main principles, primary areas, challenges and directions of the future development have been discussed. It was clarified that green tribology can be defined as an interdisciplinary field attributed to the broad induction of various concepts such as energy, materials science, green lubrication, and environmental science. The most important role and goal of green tribology is improvement of efficiency by minimizing wear and friction in tribological processes to save energy, resources and protect environment, and consequently, improve the quality of human life. The twelve principles and three areas of green tribology were analyzed. Observation of these principles can greatly reduce the environmental impact of tribological processes, assist economic development and, as a result, improve the quality of life. The integration of these areas remains the major challenge of green tribology and defines the future directions of research in this field. This work also presents a rather detailed analysis of the most important effect in green tribology—the “zero-wear” effect (selective transfer effect). It was established that the “zero-wear” effect is due to self-organization in frictional interaction in tribological systems, which is the consequence of the complex tribo-chemical reactions and physico-chemical processes occurred in the area of frictional contact, that lead to the manifestation of unique tribological characteristics: super-antifrictional (friction coefficient ~ 10−3) and without wear (intensity wear ~10−15). This condition of tribo-system was provided by a protective nanocrystalline servovite film made of soft metal with unusual combination of mechanical properties.


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