Effects of Defects on Friction for a Xe Film Sliding on Ag(111)
M. S. Tomassone, J. B. Sokoloff

TL;DR
This study investigates how step and point defects on a silver substrate affect the frictional behavior of a xenon monolayer film sliding over it, using molecular dynamics simulations and perturbation theory.
Contribution
It provides new insights into defect-induced frictional effects and compares simulation results with theoretical predictions for real surface conditions.
Findings
Friction force depends on defect type and sliding direction.
Pinning occurs below a critical force, influenced by defect presence.
Simulations align with perturbation theory, aiding understanding of real surface behavior.
Abstract
The effects of a step defect and a random array of point defects (such as vacancies or substitutional impurities) on the force of friction acting on a xenon monolayer film as it slides on a silver (111) substrate are studied by molecular dynamic simulations and compared with the results of lowest order perturbation theory in the substrate corrugation potential. For the case of a step, the magnitude and velocity dependence of the friction force are strongly dependent on the direction of sliding respect to the step and the corrugation strength. When the applied force F is perpendicular to the step, the film is pinned forF less than a critical force Fc. Motion of the film along the step, however, is not pinned. Fluctuations in the sliding velocity in time provide evidence of both stick-slip motion and thermally activated creep. Simulations done with a substrate containing a 5 percent…
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