Tribology for Design by Professor Steve Franklin

As a tribologist and materials technologist, Steve will take you into the details of the tribology world.

Professor Steve Franklin - Tribology for Design

Steve Franklin Consultancy, also a permanent Visiting Professor at the University of Sheffield, UK, and also at the University of Amsterdam

Specialist expertise in tribology, bio-tribology and nano-tribology, materials science & technology, coatings & surface treatments. Application experience in products for medical & home healthcare, personal care and consumer electronics, soft contact lenses, nanolithography equipment for chip manufacture, manufacturing equipment. Skills and experience in industry-academic bridge-forming, translation of business needs to research questions, leadership of professionals, R&D coordination, project leadership, research proposals, technical coaching, training & lecturing, expert witness, technical editing of publications. 50+ scientific journal publications, 17 patents.

Steve will convince us that tribology is often the basis of a design.

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University of Sheffield: Go
University of Amsterdam: Go
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Fundamentals

Tribology is of fundamental importance to the design of all products and machinery that involve motion, and is all about friction, wear and lubrication. In practice, these translate into lifetime performance, reliability, energy efficiency, maintenance and often basic functionality. Tribology is ubiquitous; for example, in products that interact with the human body, tribology also plays a large part in determining comfort and discomfort, “feel” perception and damage to tissue.

Behaviour

Tribological behaviour, especially when considered as a function of time, is elusive and not easy to predict. Friction and wear are predominantly surface phenomena and are affected by many factors including the materials, forces, roughness and environment involved and, moreover, these factors often interact with each other. Unfortunately, this means that questions such as “What is the friction coefficient of steel?” and “What is the wear rate of aluminium?” cannot be answered in a simple way. Nevertheless, a basic understanding of how different factors can influence friction and wear behaviour

Talk

In this talk, I will give an overview of how tribological behaviour can be influenced in design, what factors should be taken into account and why, and illustrate this using practical design examples.

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16 april 2024
NH Conference Centre Koningshof, Locht 117, 5504 RM Veldhoven

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