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From Molecular to Multiasperity Contacts: How Roughness Bridges the Friction Scale Gap

[Image: see text] The tangential force required to observe slip across a whole frictional interface can increase over time under a constant load, due to any combination of creep, chemical, or structural changes of the interface. In macroscopic rate-and-state models, these frictional aging processes...

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Autores principales: Frérot, Lucas, Crespo, Alexia, El-Awady, Jaafar A., Robbins, Mark O., Cayer-Barrioz, Juliette, Mazuyer, Denis
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2023
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9933612/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36690336
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.2c08435
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author Frérot, Lucas
Crespo, Alexia
El-Awady, Jaafar A.
Robbins, Mark O.
Cayer-Barrioz, Juliette
Mazuyer, Denis
author_facet Frérot, Lucas
Crespo, Alexia
El-Awady, Jaafar A.
Robbins, Mark O.
Cayer-Barrioz, Juliette
Mazuyer, Denis
author_sort Frérot, Lucas
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] The tangential force required to observe slip across a whole frictional interface can increase over time under a constant load, due to any combination of creep, chemical, or structural changes of the interface. In macroscopic rate-and-state models, these frictional aging processes are lumped into an ad hoc state variable. Here we explain, for a frictional system exclusively undergoing structural aging, how the macroscopic friction response emerges from the interplay between the surface roughness and the molecular motion within adsorbed monolayers. The existence of contact junctions and their friction dynamics are studied through coupled experimental and computational approaches. The former provides detailed measurements of how the friction force decays, after the stiction peak, to a steady-state value over a few nanometers of sliding distance, while the latter demonstrates how this memory distance is related to the evolution of the number of cross-surface attractive physical links, within contact junctions, between the molecules adsorbed on the rough surfaces. We also show that roughness is a sufficient condition for the appearance of structural aging. Using a unified model for friction between rough adsorbed monolayers, we show how contact junctions are a key component in structural aging and how the infrajunction molecular motion can control the macroscopic response.
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spelling pubmed-99336122023-02-17 From Molecular to Multiasperity Contacts: How Roughness Bridges the Friction Scale Gap Frérot, Lucas Crespo, Alexia El-Awady, Jaafar A. Robbins, Mark O. Cayer-Barrioz, Juliette Mazuyer, Denis ACS Nano [Image: see text] The tangential force required to observe slip across a whole frictional interface can increase over time under a constant load, due to any combination of creep, chemical, or structural changes of the interface. In macroscopic rate-and-state models, these frictional aging processes are lumped into an ad hoc state variable. Here we explain, for a frictional system exclusively undergoing structural aging, how the macroscopic friction response emerges from the interplay between the surface roughness and the molecular motion within adsorbed monolayers. The existence of contact junctions and their friction dynamics are studied through coupled experimental and computational approaches. The former provides detailed measurements of how the friction force decays, after the stiction peak, to a steady-state value over a few nanometers of sliding distance, while the latter demonstrates how this memory distance is related to the evolution of the number of cross-surface attractive physical links, within contact junctions, between the molecules adsorbed on the rough surfaces. We also show that roughness is a sufficient condition for the appearance of structural aging. Using a unified model for friction between rough adsorbed monolayers, we show how contact junctions are a key component in structural aging and how the infrajunction molecular motion can control the macroscopic response. American Chemical Society 2023-01-23 /pmc/articles/PMC9933612/ /pubmed/36690336 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.2c08435 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Frérot, Lucas
Crespo, Alexia
El-Awady, Jaafar A.
Robbins, Mark O.
Cayer-Barrioz, Juliette
Mazuyer, Denis
From Molecular to Multiasperity Contacts: How Roughness Bridges the Friction Scale Gap
title From Molecular to Multiasperity Contacts: How Roughness Bridges the Friction Scale Gap
title_full From Molecular to Multiasperity Contacts: How Roughness Bridges the Friction Scale Gap
title_fullStr From Molecular to Multiasperity Contacts: How Roughness Bridges the Friction Scale Gap
title_full_unstemmed From Molecular to Multiasperity Contacts: How Roughness Bridges the Friction Scale Gap
title_short From Molecular to Multiasperity Contacts: How Roughness Bridges the Friction Scale Gap
title_sort from molecular to multiasperity contacts: how roughness bridges the friction scale gap
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9933612/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36690336
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.2c08435
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