Micro vs. Nano: Effect of BN Additives on the Rheological and Tribological Properties of Lithium Grease
Gaobo Lou, Xiaoling Yao, Yuhao Fang, Yifan ChenThe influence of BN particle size on lithium grease performance was systematically compared among a base grease (Li), a micro-BN (3 µm, 0.1 wt%) modified grease (Li + 0.1% mBN), and a nano-BN (50 nm, 0.1 wt%) modified grease (Li + 0.1% nBN). SEM shows that addition nano-BN leads to a more compact soap fiber networks, whereas micro-BN tends to agglomerate and provides limited reinforcement, leaving the base grease with a loose, porous network. Consequently, Li + 0.1% nBN outperforms both Li and Li + 0.1% mBN in dropping point (199.5 °C vs. 194.9 °C and 198.6 °C), oil separation (0.39% vs. 0.64% and 0.44%), and flow point (49% vs. 45% and 47%). Its plateau modulus is significantly higher, reflecting stronger network entanglement. However, Li + 0.1% nBN shows lower structural recovery (61.0%) than Li (65.8%) and Li + 0.1% mBN (67.2%) due to rigid particle–fiber junctions. Notably, Li + 0.1% mBN exhibits a unique frequency-dependent viscoelasticity: higher tanδ at low frequencies but lower tanδ at high frequencies relative to Li. Tribologically, Li + 0.1% nBN reduces friction coefficient by 35% and wear scar diameter by 12.7% compared with Li, outperforming Li + 0.1% mBN. XPS confirms a protective hybrid tribofilm (BN + organic nitrogen species + iron oxides) on the nano-BN lubricated surface. Particle size critically governs BN–fiber interactions and the resulting rheological and tribological performance.