论文标题
弹性弹性的名义平坦粗糙接触界面的粘附摩擦的基于烧结的统计模型
An asperity-based statistical model for the adhesive friction of elastic nominally flat rough contact interfaces
论文作者
论文摘要
基于接触力学的基于名义平坦的粗糙表面摩擦的模型无法充分捕获某些实验观察到的现象,例如从静态摩擦峰到较低的滑动摩擦水平的过渡,以及剪切诱导的接触区域减少,在预距离制度中尤其是在较短材料中,这些摩托车的过渡。在这里,我们提出了一个基于描述各个连接的微型力学的统计模型。该模型考虑了光滑的刚性平坦表面与名义平坦的线性弹性粗糙表面之间的接触,该模型将准静态切线载荷(直至全滑动),其中包含随机独立球形覆盖,并说明了在微观接触水平下粘附和摩擦之间的耦合。该模型在定性上重现了宏观剪切诱导的接触区域的减少,并且显着地,静态摩擦峰,而无需明确引入两个不同的摩擦水平。它还证明了静态摩擦峰和接触面积演变如何取决于正常负载以及某些关键的微观界面特性,例如表面能,模式混合和摩擦剪切强度。显示“更坚固”的界面(即具有较大的表面能和较小的模式混合参数)显示出更大的真实接触面积和更明显的静态摩擦峰。总体而言,这项工作提供了有关如何在浅绿色水平上运行的关键微观属性与表面统计相结合的重要见解,以重现在粗大的摩擦式接触实验中观察到的重要宏观响应。
Contact mechanics-based models for the friction of nominally flat rough surfaces have not been able to adequately capture certain key experimentally observed phenomenona, such as the transition from a static friction peak to a lower level of sliding friction and the shear-induced contact area reduction that has been observed in the pre-sliding regime especially for soft materials. Here, we propose a statistical model based on physically-rooted contact mechanics laws describing the micromechanics of individual junctions. The model considers the quasi-static tangential loading, up to full sliding, of the contact between a smooth rigid flat surface and a nominally flat linear elastic rough surface comprising random independent spherical asperities, and accounts for the coupling between adhesion and friction at the micro-junction level. The model qualitatively reproduces both the macroscopic shear-induced contact area reduction and, remarkably, the static friction peak without the need to explicitly introduce two different friction levels. It also demonstrates how the static friction peak and contact area evolution depend on the normal load and certain key microscale interface properties such as surface energy, mode mixity and frictional shear strength. "Tougher" interfaces (i.e. with larger surface energy and smaller mode mixity parameter) are shown to result in a larger real contact area and a more pronounced static friction peak. Overall, this work provides important insights about how key microscale properties operating at the asperity level can combine with the surface statistics to reproduce important macroscopic responses observed in rough frictionalsoft contact experiments.