Volume 156, 2012

Hydration lubrication: exploring a new paradigm

Abstract

Lubrication by hydration shells that surround, and are firmly attached to, charges in water, and yet are highly fluid, provide a new mode for the extreme reduction of friction in aqueous media. We report new measurements, using a mica surface-force balance, on several different systems which exhibit hydration lubrication, extending earlier studies significantly to shed new light on the nature and limits of this mechanism. These include lubrication by hydrated ions trapped between charged surfaces, and boundary lubrication by surfactants, by poly-zwitterionic brushes and by close-packed layers of phosphatidylcholine vesicles. Sliding friction coefficients as low as 10−4 or even lower, and mean contact pressures of up to 17 MPa or higher are indicated. This suggests that the hydration lubrication mechanism may underlie low-friction sliding in biological systems, in which such pressures are rarely exceeded.

  • This article is part of the themed collection: Tribology

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
09 Dec 2011
Accepted
22 Dec 2011
First published
10 Jan 2012

Faraday Discuss., 2012,156, 217-233

Hydration lubrication: exploring a new paradigm

A. Gaisinskaya, L. Ma, G. Silbert, R. Sorkin, O. Tairy, R. Goldberg, N. Kampf and J. Klein, Faraday Discuss., 2012, 156, 217 DOI: 10.1039/C2FD00127F

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