Phosphate Reactions as Mechanisms of High-Temperature Lubrication

Anitha Nagarajan, Carolina Garrido, Jorge E. Gatica, Wilfredo Morales

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    One of the major problems preventing the operation of advanced gas turbine engines at higher temperatures is the inability of currently used liquid lubricants to survive at these higher temperatures under friction and wear conditions. Current state-of-the-art organic liquid lubricants rapidly degrade at temperatures above 300 °C; hence some other form of lubrication is necessary. Vapor-phase lubrication is a promising new technology for high-temperature lubrication. This lubrication method employs a liquid phosphate ester that is vaporized and delivered to bearings or gears; the vapor reacts with the metal surfaces, generating a solid lubricious film that has proven very stable at high temperatures. In this study, solid lubricious films were grown on cast-iron foils in order to obtain reaction and diffusion rate data to help characterize the growth mechanism. A phenomenological mathematical model of the film deposition process was derived incorporating transport and kinetic parameters that were coupled to the experimental data. This phenomenological model can now be reliably used as a predictive and scale-up tool for future vapor-phase lubrication studies.

    Original languageAmerican English
    JournalNASA/TM—2006-214060
    StatePublished - May 1 2006

    Keywords

    • Lubrication; Chemistry; Kinetics

    Disciplines

    • Chemical Engineering

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