Hard-material Adhesion: Which Scales of Roughness Matter?
Luke A. Thimons, Abhijeet Gujrati, Antoine Sanner, Lars Pastewka,, Tevis D. B. Jacobs

TL;DR
This study investigates how different length scales of surface roughness influence the adhesion of hard materials, revealing a critical band of nanometer-scale features that significantly affect macroscopic adhesion.
Contribution
The paper identifies the specific nanometer-scale roughness features that most strongly impact adhesion in hard-material contacts, using numerical modeling and extensive experimental data.
Findings
Nanometer-scale roughness critically influences adhesion.
Effective work of adhesion varies with surface topography.
A specific roughness scale range (43 nm to 1.8 nm) has the strongest effect.
Abstract
Surface topography strongly modifies adhesion of hard-material contacts, yet roughness of real surfaces typically exists over many length scales. This investigation aims to determine which scales of topography have the strongest effect on macroscopic adhesion. Adhesion measurements were performed on technology-relevant diamond coatings of varying roughness using spherical ruby probes that are large enough (-mm-diameter) to sample all length scales of topography. For each material, more than measurements of pull-off force were performed in order to investigate the magnitude and statistical distribution of adhesion. Using sphere-contact models, the roughness-dependent effective values of work of adhesion were measured, ranging from to mJ/m across the four surfaces. The data was more accurately fit using numerical analysis, where an interaction potential was…
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