Green tribology has been enthusiastically adopted by many in industry and academia, with high-impact, high-visibility studies being published in research journals like Nature and Science. However, what we need now is a shift away from a focused, case-study approach, towards a broader, European-based, vision of green-technology innovation based on a doctoral training programme designed to produce a dozen, newly qualified researchers who can develop novel, green-tribology concepts and spread this mind-set to encompass all forms of green-engineering design. The 4 Beneficiaries and many of the Partners in GreenTRIBOS are proven innovators in the field of green tribology. Working from different perspectives – materials and coatings, lubricants and tribochemistry, nanotechnology, interfaces, modelling and design – in three previous EU projects we clearly demonstrated that breakthrough green concepts are possible. We will use these existing materials, taking account their limitations, and provide them with green, synergistic contact designs, based on lightweight polymers and metals, durable hard metals and surface coatings, water, cellulose fibres, recyclable thermoplasts, energy-efficient carbon-based materials as well as high-shear-strength and low-viscosity lubricants. In this way, GreenTRIBOS will take advantage of its own pre-existing knowledge and go beyond the state of the art based on the following 5 new concepts:
(1) By considering the full impact of the engineering lifecycle. It is vital for any green solution to also consider the manufacturing costs and resources used, the maintenance, the pollution and the total energy that is consumed. A component is only truly green if it is green from the cradle to the grave.
(2) By providing real green-tribology solutions with synergistic designs and new functionality.
(3) By introducing the idea of green tribology to a wider sector of European industry.
(4) By taking a quantitative-assessment approach to real green impact.
(5) By introducing generic green-tribology mechanisms to European sustainable engineering.