(In)commensurability, scaling and multiplicity of friction in nanocrystals and application to gold nanocrystals on graphite
Astrid S. de Wijn

TL;DR
This paper analytically investigates the scaling of friction in nanocrystals, revealing multiple coexistence regimes of commensurate and incommensurate states, with implications for interpreting friction experiments on gold nanocrystals on graphite.
Contribution
It introduces a systematic analysis of friction scaling and multiplicity of states in nanocrystals, including irregular shapes and different geometries, extending understanding of nanoscale friction.
Findings
Three friction branches coexist with distinct scaling laws.
Incommensurate states do not scale with contact size.
A classification quantity for commensurability is proposed.
Abstract
The scaling of friction with the contact size and (in)commensurabilty of nanoscopic and mesoscopic crystals on a regular substrate are investigated analytically for triangular nanocrystals on hexagonal substrates. The crystals are assumed to be stiff, but not completely rigid. Commensurate and incommensurate configurations are identified systematically. It is shown that three distinct friction branches coexist, an incommensurate one that does not scale with the contact size () and two commensurate ones which scale differently (with and ) and are associated with various combinations of commensurate and incommensurate lattice parameters and orientations. This coexistence is a direct consequence of the two-dimensional nature of the contact layer, and such multiplicity exists in all geometries consisting of regular lattices. To demonstrate this, the procedure is…
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