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Is the boundary layer of an ionic liquid equally lubricating at higher temperature?

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posted on 2025-05-09, 12:08 authored by Nicklas Hjalmarsson, Rob Atkin, Mark W. Rutland
Atomic force microscopy has been used to study the effect of temperature on normal forces and friction for the room temperature ionic liquid (IL) ethylammonium nitrate (EAN), confined between mica and a silica colloid probe at 25 °C, 50 °C, and 80 °C. Force curves revealed a strong fluid dynamic influence at room temperature, which was greatly reduced at elevated temperatures due to the reduced liquid viscosity. A fluid dynamic analysis reveals that bulk viscosity is manifested at large separation but that EAN displays a nonzero slip, indicating a region of different viscosity near the surface. At high temperatures, the reduction in fluid dynamic force reveals step-like force curves, similar to those found at room temperature using much lower scan rates. The ionic liquid boundary layer remains adsorbed to the solid surface even at high temperature, which provides a mechanism for lubrication when fluid dynamic lubrication is strongly reduced. The friction data reveals a decrease in absolute friction force with increasing temperature, which is associated with increased thermal motion and reduced viscosity of the near surface layers but, consistent with the normal force data, boundary layer lubrication was unaffected. The implications for ILs as lubricants are discussed in terms of the behaviour of this well characterised system.

Funding

ARC

FT120100313

DP120102708

History

Journal title

Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics

Volume

18

Issue

13

Pagination

9232-9239

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

Place published

London

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Science and Information Technology

School

School of Environmental and Life Sciences

Rights statement

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence.

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