Dependence of Adhesive Friction on Surface Roughness and Elastic Modulus
Daniel Maksuta (1, 5), Siddhesh Dalvi (2, 5), Abhijeet Gujrati (3),, Lars Pastewka (4), Tevis DB Jacobs (4), Ali Dhinojwala (2) ((1) Department of, Biology, Integrated Bioscience Program, The University of Akron, Akron, Ohio,, 44325, United States (2) School of Polymer Science

TL;DR
This study reveals that surface roughness and elastic modulus significantly influence adhesive friction in elastomers, with roughness-induced oscillations affecting molecular dissipation processes and a universal scaling law relating shear stress to modulus.
Contribution
It demonstrates that roughness-induced oscillations influence adhesive dissipation and introduces a universal scaling law linking shear stress to elastic modulus.
Findings
Adhesive dissipation dominates friction over viscoelastic dissipation.
Roughness-induced oscillations affect molecular processes governing adhesion.
Frictional shear stress scales with the square root of elastic modulus.
Abstract
When adhesive elastomeric materials slide over hard rough surfaces at low velocities, there are two primary dissipative mechanisms that control how friction changes with sliding velocity: viscoelastic dissipation and adhesive dissipation. To distinguish the contribution of these dissipative mechanisms we have measured frictional shear stresses for crosslinked polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) on three different rough surfaces of similar surface chemistry across nearly six decades of sliding velocity. The results show that the observed friction is dominated by adhesive dissipation, rather than viscoelastic dissipation. Prior models for elastomer friction assume that roughness only influences adhesive dissipation via the amount of contact area; by contrast, we find that the roughness-induced oscillations occurring across all length scales from macroscopic to atomic influence the molecular…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAdhesion, Friction, and Surface Interactions · Sports Performance and Training · Force Microscopy Techniques and Applications
