From molecular to multi-asperity contacts: how roughness bridges the friction scale gap
Lucas Fr\'erot, Alexia Crespo, Jaafar A. El-Awady, Mark O. Robbins,, Juliette Cayer-Barrioz, Denis Mazuyer

TL;DR
This paper links nano-scale molecular interactions and surface roughness to macro-scale friction behavior, revealing how contact junction dynamics and roughness influence transient friction and aging phenomena through combined experiments and simulations.
Contribution
It introduces a multiscale framework connecting atomic-scale contact junctions and roughness to macroscopic friction, highlighting the role of molecular motion and junction evolution.
Findings
Transient friction overshoot observed after rest periods.
Friction force decays over a few nanometers distance.
Roughness induces frictional aging through contact junctions.
Abstract
While friction stems from the fundamental interactions between atoms at a contact interface, its best descriptions at the macroscopic scale remain phenomenological. The so called "rate-and-state" models, which specify the friction response in terms of the relative sliding velocity and the "age" of the contact interface, fail to uncover the nano-scale mechanisms governing the macro-scale response, while models of friction at the atomic scale often overlook how roughness can alter the friction behavior. Here we bridge this gap between nano and macro descriptions of friction by correlating the physical origin of macroscopic friction to the existence, due to nanometric roughness, of contact junctions between adsorbed monolayers. Their dynamics, as we show, emerges from molecular motion. Through coupled experimental and atomic simulations, we highlight that transient friction overshoots its…
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Taxonomy
TopicsForce Microscopy Techniques and Applications · Adhesion, Friction, and Surface Interactions · Molecular Junctions and Nanostructures
