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      Liquid Crystals in Tribology

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          Abstract

          Two decades ago, the literature dealing with the possible applications of low molar mass liquid crystals, also called monomer liquid crystals (MLCs), only included about 50 references. Today, thousands of papers, conference reports, books or book chapters and patents refer to the study and applications of MLCs as lubricants and lubricant additives and efforts are made to develop new commercial applications. The development of more efficient lubricants is of paramount technological and economic relevance as it is estimated that half the energy consumption is dissipated as friction. MLCs have shown their ability to form ordered boundary layers with good load-carrying capacity and to lower the friction coefficients, wear rates and contact temperature of sliding surfaces, thus contributing to increase the components service life and to save energy. This review includes the use of MLCs in lubrication, and dispersions of MLCs in conventional polymers (PDMLCs). Finally, new lubricating system composed of MLC blends with surfactants, ionic liquids or nanophases are considered.

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          Ionic Liquids in Tribology

          Current research on room-temperature ionic liquids as lubricants is described. Ionic liquids possess excellent properties such as non-volatility, non-flammability, and thermo-oxidative stability. The potential use of ionic liquids as lubricants was first proposed in 2001 and approximately 70 articles pertaining to fundamental research on ionic liquids have been published through May 2009. A large majority of the cations examined in this area are derived from 1,3-dialkylimidazolium, with a higher alkyl group on the imidazolium cation being beneficial for good lubrication, while it reduces the thermo-oxidative stability. Hydrophobic anions provide both good lubricity and significant thermo-oxidative stability. The anions decompose through a tribochemical reaction to generate metal fluoride on the rubbed surface. Additive technology to improve lubricity is also explained. An introduction to tribology as an interdisciplinary field of lubrication is also provided.
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            Ionic Liquids as Advanced Lubricant Fluids

            Ionic liquids (ILs) are finding technological applications as chemical reaction media and engineering fluids. Some emerging fields are those of lubrication, surface engineering and nanotechnology. ILs are thermally stable, non-flammable highly polar fluids with negligible volatility, these characteristics make them ideal candidates for new lubricants under severe conditions, were conventional oils and greases or solid lubricants fail. Such conditions include ultra-high vacuum and extreme temperatures. Other very promising areas which depend on the interaction between IL molecules and material surfaces are the use of ILs in the lubrication of microelectromechanic and nanoelectromechanic systems (MEMS and NEMS), the friction and wear reduction of reactive light alloys and the modification of nanophases.
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              Tribology: friction and wear of engineering materials

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Int J Mol Sci
                ijms
                International Journal of Molecular Sciences
                Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI)
                1422-0067
                September 2009
                18 September 2009
                : 10
                : 9
                : 4102-4115
                Affiliations
                Grupo de Ciencia de Materiales e Ingeniería Metalúrgica. Departamento de Ingeniería de Materiales y Fabricación. Universidad Politécnica de Cartagena. Campus de la Muralla del Mar. C/Doctor Fleming s/n. 30202-Cartagena, Spain
                Author notes
                [* ]Author to whom correspondence should be addressed; E-Mail: mdolores.bermudez@ 123456upct.es ; Tel. +34-968-325958; Fax: +34-968-326445.
                Article
                ijms-10-04102
                10.3390/ijms10094102
                2769152
                19865534
                9460b68d-a79d-4cb7-bd51-b559ab7a4f22
                © 2009 by the authors; licensee Molecular Diversity Preservation International, Basel, Switzerland.

                This article is an open-access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).

                History
                : 2 September 2009
                : 11 September 2009
                : 16 September 2009
                Categories
                Review

                Molecular biology
                tribology,monomer liquid crystals,lubrication
                Molecular biology
                tribology, monomer liquid crystals, lubrication

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