Microabrasive wear testing of materials has been the subject of a significa
nt amount of research as its potential for examining the wear behaviour of
thin coatings and bulk materials in a sensitive manner has become apparent.
The test comprises of rotation of a ball (with no translation) against a t
estpiece with a pool of abrasive slurry surrounding the contact. While the
test is elegant and simple, there are some phenomena which may occur during
a test which may render the results of such an abrasive test invalid. This
paper has examined the role of ridge formation in soda-lime glass. Ridges
are thin bands of unabraded material which form in the wear scar which, if
stable, are worn down only by a sliding action against the ball. It is prop
osed that the ridges form in the wear scar due to inhomogeneous flow of abr
asive slurry. Ridge formation is promoted by high loads and low slurry visc
osities, both of which hinder entrainment of abrasive particles between the
ball and specimen in the early stages of wear and also hinder entrainment
of particles between the ball and any existing ridge. A regime where format
ion of stable ridges is suppressed has been identified in terms of applied
load and slurry viscosity for a range of abrasive slurries, Stable ridge fo
rmation results in low wear rates, but when ridge formation is suppressed,
wear of glass has been observed to be broadly independent of slurry viscosi
ty and proportional to applied load. It is proposed that ridge formation is
a general phenomenon in such tests, and care must be taken to ensure that
it is suppressed to allow valid abrasive wear tests to be conducted. (C) 20
00 Elsevier Science S.A. All rights reserved.