Manufacturing Industry

High-temperature solid lubricant protects at 650[degrees]C.(Surface Engineering)

Advanced Materials & Processes, September, 2003

A high-temperature solid lubricant coating material that is said to combine wear-resistant metals and ceramics with solid lubricant additives has been developed at NASA Glenn Research Center, Cleveland, Ohio. Called PS300, the lubricant reduces friction and wear in sliding contacts from below ambient to over 650 [degrees]C (1200[degrees]F).

The lubricant was specifically developed as a shaft lubricant to protect foil air beatings in turbomachinery such as gas turbines. JPS300 shaft coatings have successfully lubricated foil bearings for more than 100,000 cycles without wearing out. Two spinoff applications include high-pressure steam turbine control valves for advanced power plants. A version made via powder metallurgy techniques, called PM300, is applied to...

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