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Surface effects of corrosive media on hardness, friction, and wear of materials
Author(s) -
Kazuhisa Miyoshi,
D. H. Buckley,
G. W. P. Rengstorff,
Hiroyuki Ishigaki
Publication year - 1985
Publication title -
industrial and engineering chemistry product research and development
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1541-4841
pISSN - 0196-4321
DOI - 10.1021/i300019a018
Subject(s) - social media , citation , icon , george (robot) , library science , advertising , computer science , world wide web , history , art history , business , programming language
Hardness, friction, and wear experiments were conducted with magnesium oxide exposed to various corrosive media and also with elemental iron and nickel exposed to water and NaOH. Chlorides such as MgCl2 and sodium containing films were formed on cleaved magnesium oxide surfaces. The MgCl2 films softened the magnesium oxide surfaces and caused high friction and great deformation. Hardness was strongly influenced by the pH value of the HCl-containing solution. The lower the pH, the lower the microhardness. Neither the pH value of nor the immersion time in NaOH containing, NaCl containing, and HNO3 containing solutions influenced the microhardness of magnesium oxide. NaOH formed a protective and low friction film on iron surfaces. The coefficient of friction and the wear for iron were low at concentrations of NaOH higher than 0.01 N. An increase in NaOH concentration resulted in a decrease in the concentration of ferric oxide on the iron surface. It took less NaOH to form a protective, low friction film on nickel than on iron.

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