Wear is the inevitable damage process of surfaces during sliding contact. According to the well-known Archard’s wear law, the wear volume scales with the real contact area and as a result is proportional to the load. Decades of wear experiments, however, show that this relation only holds up to a certain load limit, above which the linearity is broken and a transition from mild to severe wear occurs. We investigate the microscopic origins of this breakdown and the corresponding wear transition at the asperity level. Our atomistic simulations reveal that the interaction between subsurface stress fields of neighboring contact spots promotes the transition from mild to severe wear. The results show that this interaction triggers the deep propa...
Current engineering wear models are often based on empirical parameters rather than built upon physi...
True contact between solids with randomly rough surfaces tends to occur at a large number of microsc...
Many engineering applications often involve contacting surfaces. The contact can be either in the fo...
Engineering wear models are generally empirical and lack connections to the physical processes of de...
Sliding contact between solids leads to material detaching from their surfaces in the form of debris...
Tribological problems are particularly difficult to comprehend. Different physical mechanisms (inclu...
The adhesive wear process consists of several physical phenomena including plasticity and fracture w...
Surface roughness is relevant to all the phenomena and processes that take place at the interface be...
Abstract We used molecular dynamics simulation to investigate the friction of a single asperity agai...
International audienceWear is well known for causing material loss in a sliding interface. Available...
ABSTRACT Concerning the final aim, that is to make clear the mechanism of the wear mode transition f...
The wear volume is known to keep increasing during frictional processes, and Archard notably propose...
The roughness of natural surfaces emerges in the form of surface asperities at length scales of micr...
Surfaces are rough, unless special care is taken to make them atomically smooth. Roughness exists at...
Abstract In this review, we discuss our recent advances in modeling adhesive wear mechanisms using c...
Current engineering wear models are often based on empirical parameters rather than built upon physi...
True contact between solids with randomly rough surfaces tends to occur at a large number of microsc...
Many engineering applications often involve contacting surfaces. The contact can be either in the fo...
Engineering wear models are generally empirical and lack connections to the physical processes of de...
Sliding contact between solids leads to material detaching from their surfaces in the form of debris...
Tribological problems are particularly difficult to comprehend. Different physical mechanisms (inclu...
The adhesive wear process consists of several physical phenomena including plasticity and fracture w...
Surface roughness is relevant to all the phenomena and processes that take place at the interface be...
Abstract We used molecular dynamics simulation to investigate the friction of a single asperity agai...
International audienceWear is well known for causing material loss in a sliding interface. Available...
ABSTRACT Concerning the final aim, that is to make clear the mechanism of the wear mode transition f...
The wear volume is known to keep increasing during frictional processes, and Archard notably propose...
The roughness of natural surfaces emerges in the form of surface asperities at length scales of micr...
Surfaces are rough, unless special care is taken to make them atomically smooth. Roughness exists at...
Abstract In this review, we discuss our recent advances in modeling adhesive wear mechanisms using c...
Current engineering wear models are often based on empirical parameters rather than built upon physi...
True contact between solids with randomly rough surfaces tends to occur at a large number of microsc...
Many engineering applications often involve contacting surfaces. The contact can be either in the fo...