Journal
WEAR
Volume 251, Issue -, Pages 1469-1476Publisher
ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/S0043-1648(01)00785-2
Keywords
brake; third body material; friction layer; electron microscopy
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The chemical and microstructural changes occurring during braking simulation tests at the surface of a conventional brake pad material were investigated mainly by scanning and transmission electron microscopy and surface analytical techniques. It can be shown that patches of a third body material develop, comprising a compositional mix of all constituents of the pad and iron oxides from the disk. Milled debris particles still have the crystal structure of barite, the major phase of the pad material, but the grain size is reduced drastically to the nanometer scale. The major wear mechanism is delamination of filler particles from the organic binder, supported by local degradation of the phenolic resin during asperity heating. Quartz crystals are preserved thereby adopting the function of primary contact areas. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
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