Sentences with phrase «solid lubricant»

Now there IS good reason to think of it as a lubricant, starting with the title, «Anti Seize Lubricant», one of the primary ingredients being grease and graphite (graphite being a solid lubricant that shears easily), the datasheet, which describes it as such.
If nothing else comes from this, TIL its etymology is from molybdos, Greek for lead, and it's had a use as a solid lubricant so, points for the accurate technical usage, at least.
The team worked with Sandia's Materials Science and Engineering Center on a multilayer solid lubricant capable of operating at high temperatures.
The cause of the snag is thought to be the lack of molybdenum disulphide, a solid lubricant applied to the antenna assembly.
Similar solid lubricants are used commercially, for example, to improve the lifespan of moving components in cars, but Su's team worked with a formula tailored to the operating conditions and base materials.

Not exact matches

New solid and liquid lubricants are in the works, all of which have problems.
SLIPS consists of a solid surface infused with a liquid lubricant overlayer that is retained in place so that anything that comes into contact with the liquid layer will simply slide right off.
The scientists had a hunch that the SLIPS» lubricant layer was physically interfering with the mussels» ability to detect the solid surface beneath it, as they found that their feet contain proteins that are known to sense pressure.
In addition, HB335 ensures manufacturing facilities that convert these post-use plastics into liquid fuels, chemicals, waxes and lubricants are not wrongly classified as solid waste management facilities.
It has also been used as a perfume solvent and fixative, a suspension agent for solids in aerosols, a lubricant for aerosol valves, and a plasticizer in nail polish.
Diamond - Like Carbon Coating (DLC) has been used to reduce friction on the fuel pump tappets and a solid film lubricant has been used to coat the piston skirts.
But lubricants in wind mills would freeze solid at -80 C.
But the wind speed is too high, then wind mills might need to locked on place [not spin, not warm - lubricant freezes solid].
Faults (contrary to very popular theory needs) are always lubricated to some degree by a combination of, pore space water under pressure, phyllosilicate clay slurry (lots of it), lubricant metals like molybdenum (some - usually emplaced in hydrothermal processes of transport and atom precipitation with changes in pressure) and especially by copious amounts of «massive» (i.e. solid) graphite, that's almost always is present in fault surface,
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