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Tribology: Friction and Wear of Engineering Materials

TLDR
In this paper, surface topography and surfaces in contact are discussed, as well as surface engineering in tribology, materials for bearings and sliding wear by hard particles, friction and friction.
Abstract
Preface * Introduction * Surface topography and surfaces in contact * Friction * Lubricants and lubrication * Sliding wear * Wear by hard particles * Wear and design * Surface engineering in tribology * Materials for bearings * Author index * Subject index.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Nano mechanical and wear properties of multi-layer Ti/TiN coatings deposited on Al 7075 by high-vacuum magnetron sputtering

TL;DR: In this paper, the impact of the Ti layer on the microstructure, mechanical properties and abrasive properties of light alloys such as titanium and aluminum was investigated. But the impact on the texture, morphology, and triobological properties was not considered.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magnetic fluid grinding of ceramic balls

TL;DR: In this article, it is shown that there is an optimum fluid viscosity: too small a viscoelasticity does not cause skidding; too large a viscose, although it causes skidding, prevents effective action of the grits in the shaft.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conformal deposition of Ti-C:H coatings over high-aspect-ratio micro-scale structures and tribological characteristics

TL;DR: In this article, conformal deposition of Ti-C:H coatings over Ni high-aspect-ratio micro-scale structures (HARMs) fabricated by the lithography, electroplating and molding (LIGA) technique is reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

A study on the wear of enamel caused by monolithic zirconia and the subsequent phase transformation compared to two other ceramic systems.

TL;DR: Mechanically polished zirconia showed the least amount of enamel wear followed by porcelain fused to metal and glazed monolithic lithium disilicate, whereas glazed abalone showed the highest enamel Wear.
Patent

Solid state material

TL;DR: In this article, a solid state system comprising a host material and a quantum spin defect has been described, where the quantum spin defects have a T2 at room temperature of about 300 µs or more and the host material comprises a layer of single crystal CVD diamond having a total nitrogen concentration of about 20 ppb or less.