Tribology and Materials (Sep 2024)
Radioactive tracers in industry: Thin layer activation of carbon-based materials for wear measurement
Abstract
Thin layer activation (TLA) is already routinely utilised for online wear monitoring of metallic components with the radioisotope concentration (RIC) method for various tribological applications. However, many components in tribological systems are made of carbon-based bulk material (e.g. polymers) or have carbon-based wear resistant coatings (e.g. diamond-like carbon). By utilising the nuclear reaction 12C(3He,x)7Be, TLA can thus be employed in carbon-containing components. To evaluate the applicability of this approach for TLA in combination with the RIC method, three materials EPDM (ethylene propylene diene monomer), PEEK (polyether ether ketone) and DLC (diamond-like carbon), which are vastly utilised in tribology, were activated. Subsequently, the modulus of elasticity and hardness of the activated specimens were measured and evaluated if the material works for TLA. As EPDM developed cracks after the irradiation process, it is regarded to be not applicable for TLA and subsequent wear measurements. While the PEEK material revealed small changes in hardness values compared to non-irradiated samples, the irradiated DLC coating showed no detectable material changes. Both irradiated materials have been applied to representative tribological wear studies, for which the RIC results showed a good correlation with optical wear measurements.
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