Evaluation, tribological examination, and multi‐objective optimization of aluminum‐fly ash‐egg shell composites for sustainability

Abstract This study addresses the technological challenge of enhancing the mechanical and tribological properties of Al 6082 alloy by incorporating fly ash (FA) and eggshell (ES) as reinforcing materials. The objective is to fabricate hybrid metal matrix composites using sand casting, with varying w...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: J. Narendran, Santhosh Nagaraja, T. Karthikeyan, S. Anthoniraj, M. Rudra Naik
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2024-12-01
Series:Engineering Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/eng2.12980
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850065005215481856
author J. Narendran
Santhosh Nagaraja
T. Karthikeyan
S. Anthoniraj
M. Rudra Naik
author_facet J. Narendran
Santhosh Nagaraja
T. Karthikeyan
S. Anthoniraj
M. Rudra Naik
author_sort J. Narendran
collection DOAJ
description Abstract This study addresses the technological challenge of enhancing the mechanical and tribological properties of Al 6082 alloy by incorporating fly ash (FA) and eggshell (ES) as reinforcing materials. The objective is to fabricate hybrid metal matrix composites using sand casting, with varying weight percentages of eggshell and fly ash: 4 wt% eggshell with 6 wt% fly ash, 5 wt% eggshell with 5 wt% fly ash, and 6 wt% eggshell with 4 wt% fly ash. The experimental methodology involved designing experiments with response surface methodology (RSM), considering applied load, sliding velocity, and sliding distance as variables. The outcomes showed that the composite with 6 wt% eggshell and 4 wt% fly ash exhibited superior hardness, tensile strength, and impact resistance compared to pure Al 6082 and other composite variations. Additionally, this composite reduced the coefficient of friction (COF) from 0.489 for the base Al 6082 to 0.265. ANOVA based on RSM identified sliding distance as the most influential factor affecting COF. Optimal conditions for minimizing COF were determined to be a 40 N load, 0.215 m/s sliding velocity, and 800 m sliding distance through confirmatory trials. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) analysis of the worn surfaces provided further insights into the wear mechanisms. The research reveals that integrating the addition of eggshell and fly ash significantly enhances the mechanical properties and reduces the friction of Al 6082, with sliding distance being a critical factor in tribological performance. This investigation is distinctive due to its innovative use of dual reinforcement with fly ash and eggshell, which are abundant, cost‐effective, and rarely employed together in this context. The research thoroughly investigates various reinforcement ratios, providing vital insights into how they affect the composite's properties, particularly in terms of improving tribological properties. Using RSM and ANOVA makes the findings more precise and reliable. The investigation highlights sliding distance as the key factor affecting the tribological behavior of the composites.
format Article
id doaj-art-e5de2d144d0a454cb5b90a237a9447b6
institution DOAJ
issn 2577-8196
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Engineering Reports
spelling doaj-art-e5de2d144d0a454cb5b90a237a9447b62025-08-20T02:49:08ZengWileyEngineering Reports2577-81962024-12-01612n/an/a10.1002/eng2.12980Evaluation, tribological examination, and multi‐objective optimization of aluminum‐fly ash‐egg shell composites for sustainabilityJ. Narendran0Santhosh Nagaraja1T. Karthikeyan2S. Anthoniraj3M. Rudra Naik4Department of Mechanical Engineering Paavai College of Engineering Namakkal IndiaDepartment of Mechanical Engineering MVJ College of Engineering Bangalore IndiaDepartment of Mechanical Engineering JJ College of Engineering and Technology Tiruchirapalli IndiaDepartment of Computer Science and Engineering Jain (Deemed to Be University) Bangalore IndiaDepartment of Electro‐Mechanical Engineering Arba Minch University, Sawla Campus Arba Minch EthiopiaAbstract This study addresses the technological challenge of enhancing the mechanical and tribological properties of Al 6082 alloy by incorporating fly ash (FA) and eggshell (ES) as reinforcing materials. The objective is to fabricate hybrid metal matrix composites using sand casting, with varying weight percentages of eggshell and fly ash: 4 wt% eggshell with 6 wt% fly ash, 5 wt% eggshell with 5 wt% fly ash, and 6 wt% eggshell with 4 wt% fly ash. The experimental methodology involved designing experiments with response surface methodology (RSM), considering applied load, sliding velocity, and sliding distance as variables. The outcomes showed that the composite with 6 wt% eggshell and 4 wt% fly ash exhibited superior hardness, tensile strength, and impact resistance compared to pure Al 6082 and other composite variations. Additionally, this composite reduced the coefficient of friction (COF) from 0.489 for the base Al 6082 to 0.265. ANOVA based on RSM identified sliding distance as the most influential factor affecting COF. Optimal conditions for minimizing COF were determined to be a 40 N load, 0.215 m/s sliding velocity, and 800 m sliding distance through confirmatory trials. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) analysis of the worn surfaces provided further insights into the wear mechanisms. The research reveals that integrating the addition of eggshell and fly ash significantly enhances the mechanical properties and reduces the friction of Al 6082, with sliding distance being a critical factor in tribological performance. This investigation is distinctive due to its innovative use of dual reinforcement with fly ash and eggshell, which are abundant, cost‐effective, and rarely employed together in this context. The research thoroughly investigates various reinforcement ratios, providing vital insights into how they affect the composite's properties, particularly in terms of improving tribological properties. Using RSM and ANOVA makes the findings more precise and reliable. The investigation highlights sliding distance as the key factor affecting the tribological behavior of the composites.https://doi.org/10.1002/eng2.12980Al 6082egg shellfly ashmulti‐objectiveoptimization
spellingShingle J. Narendran
Santhosh Nagaraja
T. Karthikeyan
S. Anthoniraj
M. Rudra Naik
Evaluation, tribological examination, and multi‐objective optimization of aluminum‐fly ash‐egg shell composites for sustainability
Engineering Reports
Al 6082
egg shell
fly ash
multi‐objective
optimization
title Evaluation, tribological examination, and multi‐objective optimization of aluminum‐fly ash‐egg shell composites for sustainability
title_full Evaluation, tribological examination, and multi‐objective optimization of aluminum‐fly ash‐egg shell composites for sustainability
title_fullStr Evaluation, tribological examination, and multi‐objective optimization of aluminum‐fly ash‐egg shell composites for sustainability
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation, tribological examination, and multi‐objective optimization of aluminum‐fly ash‐egg shell composites for sustainability
title_short Evaluation, tribological examination, and multi‐objective optimization of aluminum‐fly ash‐egg shell composites for sustainability
title_sort evaluation tribological examination and multi objective optimization of aluminum fly ash egg shell composites for sustainability
topic Al 6082
egg shell
fly ash
multi‐objective
optimization
url https://doi.org/10.1002/eng2.12980
work_keys_str_mv AT jnarendran evaluationtribologicalexaminationandmultiobjectiveoptimizationofaluminumflyasheggshellcompositesforsustainability
AT santhoshnagaraja evaluationtribologicalexaminationandmultiobjectiveoptimizationofaluminumflyasheggshellcompositesforsustainability
AT tkarthikeyan evaluationtribologicalexaminationandmultiobjectiveoptimizationofaluminumflyasheggshellcompositesforsustainability
AT santhoniraj evaluationtribologicalexaminationandmultiobjectiveoptimizationofaluminumflyasheggshellcompositesforsustainability
AT mrudranaik evaluationtribologicalexaminationandmultiobjectiveoptimizationofaluminumflyasheggshellcompositesforsustainability