Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Sanjay K Biswas is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Sanjay K Biswas.


Tribology International | 1996

The hardnesses of poly(methylmethacrylate)

B.J. Briscoe; P.D. Evans; Sanjay K Biswas; Sujeet K. Sinha

The paper describes an experimental study of the normal and scratch hardnesses of a poly(methylmethacrylate). The deformations have been introduced using hard steel cones of a range of included cone angles. The influence of the state of interfacial lubrication is examined and rationalized. The observed time dependence of the two types of computed hardness data is compared and the nature of the correlations between these data is evaluated. It is observed that when the imposed strains are modest, say less than 0.2, the scratch hardness and normal hardness deformations produce self consistent data using first order and rather indiscriminate analyses for both types of deformations. At higher levels of imposed strain, a more critical appraisal of the nature of the deformation produced in the two cases is necessary in order to provide mutually consistent hardness values and hence unequivocal rheological characteristics for this polymer.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2009

Frictional response of fatty acids on steel

Rashmi R. Sahoo; Sanjay K Biswas

Self-assembled monolayers of fatty acids were formed on stainless steel by room-temperature solution deposition. The acids are covalently bound to the surface as carboxylate in a bidentate manner. To explore the effect of saturation in the carbon backbone on friction in sliding tribology, we study the response of saturated stearic acid (SA) and unsaturated linoleic acid (LA) as self-assembled monolayers using lateral force microscopy and nanotribometry and when the molecules are dispersed in hexadecane, using pin-on-disc tribometry. Over a very wide range (10 MPa-2.5 GPa) of contact pressures it is consistently demonstrated that the unsaturated linoleic acid molecules yield friction which is significantly lower than that of the saturated stearic acid. It is argued, using density functional theory predictions and XPS of slid track, that when the molecular backbone of unsaturated fatty acids are tilted and pressed strongly by a probe, in tribological contact, the high charge density of the double bond region of the backbone allows coupling with the steel substrate. The interaction yields a low friction carboxylate soap film on the substrate. The saturated fatty acid does not show this effect.


Journal of Materials Research | 1998

Estimation of hardness by nanoindentation of rough surfaces

M. S. Bobji; Sanjay K Biswas

The roughness of a surface influences the surface mechanical properties, estimated using nanoindentation data. Assuming a relation between the penetration depth normalized with respect to a roughness scale parameter, and the effective radius encountered by the indenter, a first order model of roughness dependency of hardness is proposed. The practical usefulness of this model is verified by the numerical simulation of nanoindentation on a fractal surface. As the roughness of a surface is increased, the hardness measured at depths comparable with the roughness scale deviates increasingly from the actual hardness. Given the constants related to indenter geometry, the present work provides a rationale and a method for deconvoluting the effect of roughness in arriving at real hardness characteristics of the near surface region of a material.


Applied Physics Letters | 1997

Effect of roughness on the measurement of nanohardness—a computer simulation study

M. S. Bobji; Sanjay K Biswas; J. B. Pethica

This letter reports a simulation study of depth sensing nanoindentation on a rough surface. The estimated mean hardness and scatter are both influenced by roughness, irrespective of whether there is a genuine variation in mechanical property with deformation volume/depth. The scatter due to roughness always decreases with penetration depth. The roughness dependency of hardness is the product of two terms. The first term is independent of property variation with deformation volume/ depth and arises due to the discrete nature of multiple contacts during indentation. The second term is due to property variation with deformation volume/depth, as changing roughness changes the aggregate strength of each contact island.


Thin Solid Films | 2003

Contact damage in TiN coatings on steel

S. Bhowmick; A.N. Kale; Vikram Jayaram; Sanjay K Biswas

Damage mechanisms beneath Vickers indentations are examined on 5\mu m TiN film deposited on stainless steel substrate as a function of load. Prominent mode of cracking includes surface edge cracks and subsurface inclined cracks. No interfacial delaminations were noted at the TiN/steel interface. The tangential traction, radial stress and shear stress distribution around an axisymmetric indentation field are used to assess the driving force for crack propagation.


Philosophical Magazine | 2012

A new method for fracture toughness determination of graded (Pt,Ni)Al bond coats by microbeam bend tests

Nagamani B Jaya; Vikram Jayaram; Sanjay K Biswas

A novel method is proposed for fracture toughness determination of graded microstructurally complex (Pt,Ni)Al bond coats using edge-notched doubly clamped beams subjected to bending. Micron-scale beams are machined using the focused ion beam and loaded in bending under a nanoindenter. Failure loads gathered from the pop-ins in the load–displacement curves combined with XFEM analysis are used to calculate K c at individual zones, free from substrate effects. The testing technique and sources of errors in measurement are described and possible micromechanisms of fracture in such heterogeneous coatings discussed.


Journal of Materials Science | 1995

Effect of sliding speed on friction and wear of uni-directional aramid fibre-phenolic resin composite

Sujeet K. Sinha; Sanjay K Biswas

A previous study on the tribological performance of a compression-moulded aramid fibre-phenolic resin composite, containing 30% continuous fibre, showed that this composite provides a reasonable combination of the friction coefficient and wear rate to be used as a friction component, such as a brake shoe. In the present work, the effect of sliding speed on the friction and wear behaviour of this composite has been investigated. The sliding experiments were conducted in a speed range of 0.1–6 m s−1 at two normal pressure levels of 1.0 and 4.9 MPa. The coefficient of friction was found to be stable over a wide range of sliding speeds and normal pressures. The wear of the composite was found to be insensitive to changes in the speed in the higher speed range. The results have been supplemented with scanning electron micrographs to help understand possible friction and wear mechanisms.


Tribology International | 1993

The scratch hardness and friction of a soft rigid-plastic solid

B.J. Briscoe; Sanjay K Biswas; Sujeet K. Sinha; S.S. Panesar

The paper describes an experimental and analytical study of the normal and scratch hardnesses of a model soft rigid-plastic solid. The material known as ‘Plasticine’, a mixture of dry particles and a mineral oil, has been deformed with a range of rigid conical indentors with included angles of between 30° and 170°. The sliding velocity dependence of the computed scratch hardness and friction has been examined in the velocity range 0.19 mm/s to 7.3 m/s. Data are also described for the time dependence of the normal hardness and also the estimated rate dependence of the intrinsic flow stress. The latter values were estimated from data obtained during the upsetting of right cylinders. Three major conclusions are drawn from these data and the associated analysis. (1) A first-order account of the scratching force may be provided by adopting a model which sums the computed plastic deformation and interfacial sliding contributions to the total sliding work. This is tantamount to the adoption of the two-term non-interacting model of friction. (2) For this system during sliding, at high sliding velocities at least, the interface shear stress which defines the boundary condition is not directly related to the bulk shear stress. The interface rheological characteristics indicate an appreciable dependence on the imposed strain or strain rate. In particular, the relative contributions of the slip and stick boundary conditions appear to be a function of the imposed sliding velocity. (3) The computed normal and scratch hardness values are not simply interrelated primarily because of the evolving boundary conditions which appear to exist in the scratching experiments.


Tribology Letters | 2013

Grafting of Dispersants on MoS2 Nanoparticles in Base Oil Lubrication of Steel

Sudhakara Aralihalli; Sanjay K Biswas

Solid lubricant nanoparticles in suspension in oil are good lubricating options for practical machinery. In this article, we select a range of dispersants, based on their polar moieties, to suspend 50-nm molybdenum disulfide particles in an industrial base oil. The suspension is used to lubricate a steel on steel sliding contact. A nitrogen-based polymeric dispersant (aminopropyl trimethoxy silane) with a free amine group and an oxygen-based polymeric dispersant (sorbital monooleate) when grafted on the particle charge the particle negatively and yield an agglomerate size which is almost the same as that of the original particle. Lubrication of the contact by these suspensions gives a coefficient of friction in the ~0.03 range. The grafting of these surfactants on the particle is shown here to be of a chemical nature and strong as the grafts survive mechanical shear stress in tribology. Such grafts are superior to those of other silane-based test surfactants which have weak functional groups. In the latter case, the particles bereft of strong grafts agglomerate easily in the lubricant and give a coefficient of friction in the 0.08–0.12 range. This article investigates the mechanism of frictional energy dissipation as influenced by the chemistry of the surfactant molecule.


Tribology International | 1980

Performance of graphic aluminium particulate composite materials

S.K. Biswas; A. Shantharam; N.A.P. Rao; K.Narayana Swamy; P.K. Rohatgi; Sanjay K Biswas

Friction characteristics of journal bearings made from cast graphic aluminum particulate composite alloy were determined under mixed lubrication and compared with those of the base alloy (without graphite) and leaded phosphor bronze. All three materials ran without seizure while the performance of the particulate composite and leaded phosphor bronze improved with running. Temperature rise in the journal bearing under mixed/boundary lubrication was also measured. It was found that with 0.3D/1000 to 1.5D/1000 clearance and a low lubrication rate (typical value for a bearing of diameter 35 mm × length 35 mm is 80 mm3/min) and at a PV value of 73 × 106 Nm m−2 min−1 graphitic aluminium alloy journal bearings operate satisfactorily without seizure and excessive temperature rise. In comparison, the bronze bearings, with all the other parameters remaining the same, could not run without excessive temperature rise at clearances below D/1000 at lubrication rates lower than 200 mm3/min

Collaboration


Dive into the Sanjay K Biswas's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Vikram Jayaram

Indian Institute of Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Deepak Kumar

Indian Veterinary Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. S. Bobji

Indian Institute of Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Om P. Khatri

Indian Institute of Petroleum

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sujeet K. Sinha

Indian Institute of Technology Delhi

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jency Daniel

Indian Institute of Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

K Venkatesh

Indian Institute of Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Manimunda Praveena

Indian Institute of Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rashmi R. Sahoo

Indian Institute of Science

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge