SLIDING WEAR PERFORMANCE OF NANO CUO PARTICLES - SHORT SISAL FIBERS - POLYAMIDE 66 HYBRID COMPOSITES

Authors

  • Rajasekhar P Department of Manufacturing Engineering, Annamalai University, Chidambaram – 608 002, Tamilnadu, India
  • Ganesan G Department of Manufacturing Engineering, Annamalai University, Chidambaram – 608 002, Tamilnadu, India.
  • Senthilkumar M Department of Mechanical Engineering, Annamalai University, Chidambaram – 608 002, Tamilnadu, India.

Keywords:

Friction coefficient, Wear Rate, Polyamide, Sisal Fiber and Copper oxide and Hybrid

Abstract

Polymers and their composites are being increasingly employed in view of their good strengths and corrosion resistance. The features that make the polymer composites in industrial applications are the opportunities to tailor their properties with special fillers. For instance, short carbon and glass fibers have been successfully employed to improve the strength and therefore the load carrying capacity of polyamide composites can also be improved Optimization of parameters is an important in the tribological process. Response surface methodology (RSM) based optimal parameter analysis was performed to investigate the change of responses like wear rate (WR) and coefficient of friction (COF) with the change of input parameters to determine optimum setting of process parameters such as normal force, sliding velocity and reinforcement for achieving minimum WR and COF. The regression model generates the response surfaces. The present study is to optimize the parameter setting for combined responses.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Friedrich K (1986), “Wear of reinforced polymers by different abrasive counterparts”. Int. J. Friction Wear Polymer Composites, Vol. 65, 233-241.

Bijwe J, Rajesh J, Jeyakumar, Ghosh and Tewari A (2000), “Influence of solid lubricants and fibre reinforcement on wear behaviour of poly ether sulphone”, Int. Journal of Tribology, Vol. 33, 697–706.

Bahadur S (2000), “The development of transfer layers and their role in polymer Tribology”, Journal of Wear, Vol. 245, 92–99.

Bahadur S and Polineni V K (1996), “Tribological studies of glass fabric reinforced polyamide composites filled with CuO and PTFE”. Journal of Wear, Vol.200, 95–104.

Cenna A A, Dastoor P and Beehag A (2001), “Effects of graphite particle addition upon the abrasive wear of polymer surfaces”, Journal of Material Science, Vol. 36, 891–900.

Hayrettin D (2009), “PA 66 spur gear durability improvement with tooth width modification”, Journal of Material Design, Vol. 30, 1060–1067.

Montgomery D C (1997), “Design and analysis of experiments”, fourth ed., John Wiley Sons, New York.

Lie P, Lu R and Huang T (2012), “A study on the mechanical and tribological properties of carbon fabric/PTFE composites”, International Journal Macro. Science, Vol. 51, 786-797.

Mohan N, Natarajan N S and Kumaresh S P (2011), “Sliding wear behavior of graphite filled glass-epoxy composites at elevated temperatures”, International Journal of Polymer Plastics Technology Engineering, Vol. 50, 251–259.

Li J and Yang X H (2009), “The tribological mechanism of poly (vinylidene fluride) composites reinforced with carbon fibers”, International Journal of Polymer Plastics Technology Engineering. Vol.49, 332-336.

Dass K, Chauhan S R and Gaur B (2014), “Study on mechanical and dry sliding wear characteristics of meta-cresol novalac epoxy composites filled with silicon carbide, aluminium oxide and zinc oxide particles”, Int. J. Tribology Transactions, Vol.57, 157-172.

Downloads

Published

2021-09-13

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

[1]
“SLIDING WEAR PERFORMANCE OF NANO CUO PARTICLES - SHORT SISAL FIBERS - POLYAMIDE 66 HYBRID COMPOSITES”, JME, vol. 14, no. 1, Sep. 2021, Accessed: Dec. 21, 2024. [Online]. Available: https://smenec.org/index.php/1/article/view/76

Similar Articles

1-10 of 295

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.