The contribution of plastic sink-in to the static friction of single asperity microscopic contacts
Owen Brazil, John B. Pethica, George M. Pharr

TL;DR
This study investigates how plastic sink-in affects static friction in microscopic diamond/metal and diamond/silica contacts under high pressure, revealing material-dependent behaviors and transition mechanisms from elastic to plastic regimes.
Contribution
It introduces a new nanoprobe technique to study microscale friction, demonstrating the role of plastic sink-in in increasing static friction for metallic contacts.
Findings
Plastic sink-in increases static friction in metallic contacts.
Fused silica shows less sink-in and no friction drop.
Transition from elastic to plastic contact involves interface failure.
Abstract
We report microscale friction experiments for diamond/metal and diamond/silica contacts under gigapascal contact pressures. Using a new nanoprobe technique which has sufficient dynamic range of force and stiffness, we demonstrate the processes involved in the transition from purely interface sliding at the nanoscale to the situation where at least one of the sliding bodies undergoes some plastic deformation. For sliding of micrometer-scale diamond spherical tips on metallic substrates, additional local plastic yielding of the substrate resulting from tangential tractions causes the tip to sink into the surface, increasing the contact area in the direction of loading and resulting in a static friction coefficient higher than the kinetic during ploughing. This sink-in is largely absent in fused silica, and no friction drop is observed, along with lower friction in general. The transition…
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