Mechanical
operation could be seriously affected by friction and
controlling it by oil lubrication has been considered as an effective
way. Good lubricant additives are very necessary to avoid the friction
damages, and to find or design new additives is always a challenge.
In this study, a systematic investigation of using cholesteryl liquid
crystals (LCs) as lubricant additives to obtain exceptional tribological
behaviors was performed. In total, four cholesteryl LC compounds were
synthesized targetedly and their thermal and mesogenic properties
were studied to see the inherent relationship between the mesogenic
phases and antifriction and antiwear performance. Through a series
of tribological and related tests, including the UMT TriboLab test,
three-dimensional optical microscopy, oil film thickness and viscosity
tests, etc., the effect of the mesogenic phases and structures of
the synthesized cholesteryl LCs on their tribological properties as
lubricant additives was investigated and a related mechanism was analyzed.
The result showed that within and close to the mesogenic phase temperature
ranges, which we called as effective temperature ranges of LC additives
(T
EF), the LCs presented better tribological
behaviors, meaning they could be used in special lubrication applications
that need to be confined in certain temperature scopes; however, the
ester groups with long alky tails could help dissolve in base oils
and adsorb onto the friction pairs. Among the four LCs, LC-D with
a long perfluoroalkyl tail brought widest mesogenic phase with considerably
enhanced lubrication performance and increased oil film thickness,
viscosity, and thermal stability, indicating that the perfluoroalkyl
group could be well used in the structural modification of LC additives
to give unexpected tribological performance. This study, in conjunction
with our experimental data, suggested that the liquid crystals may
be evaluated as potential friction modifiers for temperature-controllable
lubrication and also shed a fresh light on the development of novel
liquid crystal lubrication materials.