We demonstrate how an exponentially saturating increase of the contact area between a nanoasperity and a crystal surface, occurring on time scales governed by the Arrhenius equation, is consistent with measurements of the static friction and lateral contact stiffness on a model alkali-halide surface at different temperatures in ultrahigh vacuum. The "contact ageing" effect is attributed to atomic attrition and is eventually broken by thermally activated slip of the nanoasperity on the surface. The combination of the two effects also leads to regions of strengthening and weakening in the velocity dependence of the friction, which are well-reproduced by an extended version of the Prandtl-Tomlinson model
Friction has long been the subject of research: the empirical da Vinci-Amontons friction laws have b...
We report measurements of noncontact friction between surfaces of NbSe2 and SrTiO3 and a sharp Pt-Ir...
Friction is one of the most fascinating and yet elusive phenomena in physics. Everyday life cannot b...
We demonstrate how an exponentially saturating increase of the contact area between a nanoasperity a...
The influence of lateral vibrations on the stick-slip motion of a nanotip elastically pulled on a fl...
Understanding the time evolution of contact strength in silica nanocontacts is of great fundamental ...
Friction force microscopy (FFM) explores the interaction in a sliding contact on the nanoscale, prov...
Controlling friction on the nanometer scale is one of nowadays’ challenges for scientists and engine...
Controlling friction on the nanometer scale is one of nowaday challenges for scientists and engineer...
The influence of out-of-plane and in-plane contact vibrations and temperature on the friction force ...
The occurrence of multiple jumps in 2D atomic-scale friction measurements is used to quantify the vi...
We study the thermal effects on the frictional properties of atomically thin sheets. We simulate a s...
Rate and state friction (RSF) laws are widely-used empirical relationships that describe macroscale ...
Rate and state friction (RSF) laws are widely-used empirical relationships that describe macroscale ...
While friction stems from the fundamental interactions between atoms at a contact interface, its bes...
Friction has long been the subject of research: the empirical da Vinci-Amontons friction laws have b...
We report measurements of noncontact friction between surfaces of NbSe2 and SrTiO3 and a sharp Pt-Ir...
Friction is one of the most fascinating and yet elusive phenomena in physics. Everyday life cannot b...
We demonstrate how an exponentially saturating increase of the contact area between a nanoasperity a...
The influence of lateral vibrations on the stick-slip motion of a nanotip elastically pulled on a fl...
Understanding the time evolution of contact strength in silica nanocontacts is of great fundamental ...
Friction force microscopy (FFM) explores the interaction in a sliding contact on the nanoscale, prov...
Controlling friction on the nanometer scale is one of nowadays’ challenges for scientists and engine...
Controlling friction on the nanometer scale is one of nowaday challenges for scientists and engineer...
The influence of out-of-plane and in-plane contact vibrations and temperature on the friction force ...
The occurrence of multiple jumps in 2D atomic-scale friction measurements is used to quantify the vi...
We study the thermal effects on the frictional properties of atomically thin sheets. We simulate a s...
Rate and state friction (RSF) laws are widely-used empirical relationships that describe macroscale ...
Rate and state friction (RSF) laws are widely-used empirical relationships that describe macroscale ...
While friction stems from the fundamental interactions between atoms at a contact interface, its bes...
Friction has long been the subject of research: the empirical da Vinci-Amontons friction laws have b...
We report measurements of noncontact friction between surfaces of NbSe2 and SrTiO3 and a sharp Pt-Ir...
Friction is one of the most fascinating and yet elusive phenomena in physics. Everyday life cannot b...