Well I would love to find a road I could do 80 on! Except motorway of course, even then 80 at peak times can be an achievement!
Most roads I travel on you are lucky to do 50.
Just because YOU can't, doesn't make it impossible....does it?
Still sceptical about the gas.
Gas can only be formed when a material changes state, solid to liquid to gas is the general thing.
So you are saying a solid material goes straight from solid to gas?
So the rest of the braking world are all wrong, and you are right?
Is that it?

I have never seen a brake disc red hot so just dont believe this!
I've had mine cherry red...
But you don't need them red hot. In fact, if they were red hot they'd deform as they'd be malleable.
Anyway, all you need is the discs to be hotter than the temperature rating of the pads, and you fade.
If you don't believe me, go find a quiet road - a difficult job in your case it seems - and do some heavy braking then measure the disc temperature with an IR gun.
100s of degrees C is easily seen...the wheel gets hot enough to boil water on contact.
Why do you thing repeated heavy braking also kills track rod ends and ball joints?
(Heat)
Cheap pads glaze over at low temperatures...then you press even harder trying to brake, and get the gas layer...it's a lose lose situation.
Fit decent pads and decent discs and the problem goes away for most road driving.