4.8 Article

Phosphonium-Organophosphate Ionic Liquids as Lubricant Additives: Effects of Cation Structure on Physicochemical and Tribological Characteristics

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 6, Issue 24, Pages 22585-22593

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/am506702u

Keywords

ionic liquid; gas-to-liquid oil; lubricant antiwear additive; phosphonium; organophosphate; oil solubility

Funding

  1. Vehicle Technologies Office, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, US Department of Energy (DOE)
  2. Scientific User Facilities Division, Office of DOE-BES
  3. DOE Science Undergraduate Laboratory Internships program (SULI)
  4. Higher Education Research Experience (HERE) program

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Our previous work suggested great potential for a phosphonium-organophosphate ionic liquid (IL) as an antiwear lubricant additive. In this study, a set of five ILs were carefully designed and synthesized, with identical organophosphate anions but dissimilar phosphonium cations, to allow systematic investigation of the effects of cation alkyl chain length and symmetry on physicochemical and tribological properties. Symmetric cations with shorter alkyl chains seem to increase the density and thermal stability due to closer packing. On the other hand, either higher cation symmetry or longer alkyl moieties induce a higher viscosity, though the viscosity index is dependent more on molecular mass than on symmetry. While a larger cation size generally increases an ILs solubility in nonpolar hydrocarbon oils, six-carbon seems to be the critical minimum alkyl chain length for high oil miscibility. Both the two ILs, that are mutually oil miscible, have demonstrated promising lubricating performance at 1.04% treat rate, though the symmetric-cation IL moderately outperformed the asymmetric-cation IL. Characterizations on the tribofilm formed by the best-performing symmetric-cation IL revealed the film thickness, nanostructure, and chemical composition. Results here provide fundamental insights for future molecular design in developing oil-soluble ILs as lubricant additives.

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