9:15 AM - 9:30 AM
[SCG50-02] Micro to macro transition in fluorite friction
Keywords:firction, fluorite, direct shear friction experiment, rotary shear friction experiment
The direct shear friction experiments were a normal stress of approximately 10 [MPa] and a sliding velocity ranging from 100 - 1000 [μm/s]. The rotary shear friction experiments were conducted at normal stresses of up to 200 MPa and sliding velocities ranging from 1 - 1000 [μm/s]. The results showed that the frictional stresses for both the single-crystal and powder samples was proportional to the normal stresses and independent of the apparent contact area, in accordance with the Amontons-Coulomb friction laws, and that there was no significant velocity dependence. The single-crystal samples showed low friction coefficients (μ) of 0.2-0.3 at steady-state friction, whereas the powdered samples showed μ = 0.5-0.6, which is close to the commonly known values of the Byerlee's law.
It is suggested that ordinal macroscopic frictional mechanisms determined by the plastic deformation of asperities operated during friction experiments of the powdered samples, whereas atomic-scale mechanisms on the crystalline surfaces, or asperity deformation mechanisms different from those observed in the powdered samples, were dominant during frictional sliding of the single-crystal samples.