The influence of lateral vibrations on the stick-slip motion of a nanotip elastically pulled on a flat crystal surface is studied by atomic force microscopy measurements on a NaCl(001) surface in ultra-high vacuum. The slippage of the nanotip across the crystal lattice is anticipated at increasing driving amplitude, similarly to what is observed in presence of normal vibrations. This lowers the average friction force, as explained by the Prandtl-Tomlinson model with lateral vibrations superimposed at finite temperature. Nevertheless, the peak values of the lateral force, and the total energy losses, are expected to increase with the excitation amplitude, which may limit the practical relevance of this effect
A non-contact atomic force microscopy-based method has been used to map the static lateral forces ex...
We present a theoretical study of dry sliding friction, which has a close bearing on the experiments...
Friction is one of the most fascinating and yet elusive phenomena in physics. Everyday life cannot b...
Controlling friction on the nanometer scale is one of nowadays’ challenges for scientists and engine...
The occurrence of multiple jumps in 2D atomic-scale friction measurements is used to quantify the vi...
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 ...
Sliding friction is a nonconservative force in which kinetic energy is dissipated via various phenom...
Friction force microscopy (FFM) explores the interaction in a sliding contact on the nanoscale, prov...
Friction has long been the subject of research: the empirical da Vinci-Amontons friction laws have b...
The scaling behavior of friction between rough surfaces is a well-known phenomenon. It might be aske...
We demonstrate how an exponentially saturating increase of the contact area between a nanoasperity a...
Atomic force microscopy is being increasingly used to measure atomic-resolution force fields on samp...
Friction is caused by dissipative lateral forces that act between macroscopic objects. An improved u...
Friction between a nanoscale tip and a reconstructed Au(111) surface is investigated both by atomic ...
A non-contact atomic force microscopy-based method has been used to map the static lateral forces ex...
We present a theoretical study of dry sliding friction, which has a close bearing on the experiments...
Friction is one of the most fascinating and yet elusive phenomena in physics. Everyday life cannot b...
Controlling friction on the nanometer scale is one of nowadays’ challenges for scientists and engine...
The occurrence of multiple jumps in 2D atomic-scale friction measurements is used to quantify the vi...
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 ...
Sliding friction is a nonconservative force in which kinetic energy is dissipated via various phenom...
Friction force microscopy (FFM) explores the interaction in a sliding contact on the nanoscale, prov...
Friction has long been the subject of research: the empirical da Vinci-Amontons friction laws have b...
The scaling behavior of friction between rough surfaces is a well-known phenomenon. It might be aske...
We demonstrate how an exponentially saturating increase of the contact area between a nanoasperity a...
Atomic force microscopy is being increasingly used to measure atomic-resolution force fields on samp...
Friction is caused by dissipative lateral forces that act between macroscopic objects. An improved u...
Friction between a nanoscale tip and a reconstructed Au(111) surface is investigated both by atomic ...
A non-contact atomic force microscopy-based method has been used to map the static lateral forces ex...
We present a theoretical study of dry sliding friction, which has a close bearing on the experiments...
Friction is one of the most fascinating and yet elusive phenomena in physics. Everyday life cannot b...