1997
DOI: 10.1179/sur.1997.13.5.402
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Surface engineering to improve tribological performance of Ti–6Al–4V

Abstract: A series of thermal oxidising treatments has been carried out on V alloy at temperatures ranging from 600 to 850°C to develop a new surface engineering technique for Ti-6Al-4 V and other titanium alloys. Systematic characterisation of the thermal oxidation treated surface layers was performed using GDS, XRD, SEM, and nanoindentation testing. Ball on disc friction tests show that the coefficient offriction of a Ti-6Al-4 V disc against an alumina ball was significantly reduced after oxidation treatment. The rol… Show more

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Cited by 121 publications
(48 citation statements)
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“…The TO process is unable to provide adequate protection against wear beyond 100 m of sliding distance under the chosen loading conditions. Although prolonged treatment durations and/or higher temperatures may degrade the oxide layer quality [22] and therefore further reduce TO treatment efficacy, it is also clear that, for a thermal process, such a short treatment duration at 700°C is insufficient for most engineering applications. This difference in performance between the two treatments is clearly related to the change in oxidation kinetics under triode plasma conditions.…”
Section: Reciprocating-sliding Wear Testingmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The TO process is unable to provide adequate protection against wear beyond 100 m of sliding distance under the chosen loading conditions. Although prolonged treatment durations and/or higher temperatures may degrade the oxide layer quality [22] and therefore further reduce TO treatment efficacy, it is also clear that, for a thermal process, such a short treatment duration at 700°C is insufficient for most engineering applications. This difference in performance between the two treatments is clearly related to the change in oxidation kinetics under triode plasma conditions.…”
Section: Reciprocating-sliding Wear Testingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Conversely, temperatures that are too low, say below around 500°C, do not provide the necessary activation energy for oxygen dissolution in the titanium lattice [13]. On the other hand, short treatment durations at higher temperatures may not produce a sufficiently thick oxide compound layer for an appreciable improvement in tribological properties [22].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the case of non-oxide tribo-layer, it merely refers to the oxides that could not be identified by XRD and are not completely absent of an oxide on the Ti64 sample surface. On the other hand, the tribo-oxide layer refers to the formation of a strong and compact oxide layer during sliding process that serves as a protection to the worn surface [28][29][30]. Inherently, in an EBM process where the built condition is under high vacuum environment, the thickness of surface oxide layer only ranges from 5 to 7 nm [31].…”
Section: Dry Sliding Wear Behaviourmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Ti-6Al-4V alloy is classified as α + β alloy presenting specific weight of 4.43 g/cm 3 , therefore 56% of the corresponding value to the steel and approximately double to the aluminum density 12,13 . However, the alloy presents inadequate tribological properties, with high friction coefficient of around 0.8 14 . In wear absence, the titanium and its alloys possesses excellent corrosion resistance in many enviroments including saline solutions, similar to corporeal fluids.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%