Study on contact characteristic of nanoscale asperities by using molecular dynamics simulations

authored by
Tianxiang Liu, Geng Liu, Peter Wriggers, Shijun Zhu
Abstract

The nanoscale contacts, which play a key role in nanotechnology and micro-/ nanoelectromechanical systems, are fundamentally important for a wide range of problems including adhesion, contact formation, friction and wear, etc. Because continuum contact mechanics has limitations when it is applied at length of nanoscale, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, which can investigate internal physical mechanisms of nanostructures by atomic motions in detail, become one of the most promising approaches for investigating mechanical behaviors of contacts in nanoscale. First, contacts between rigid cylindrical probes with different radii and an elastic half-space substrate are studied by using MD simulations with the assistance of the classical Lennard-Jones potential. For contacts without adhesion, the relationship between the applied force and the contact half-width is analyzed. The von Mises stress distributions are then discussed. For contacts with adhesion, the phenomena of the jump-to-contact, the break-off contact, and the hysteresis are observed. The pressure distributions and the von Mises stress contours in the contact region agree with the existing solutions. Second, the effects of the surface topography on adhesive contacts are studied by using MD simulations with the embedded atom method potential. The adhesive contact mechanical characteristic of a series of asperities with different shapes, different sizes, and different numbers on contacting surfaces are discovered and compared. The results show that the surface topography is one of the major factors, which may influence the contact behaviors between the interfaces of nanoscale components.

Organisation(s)
Institute of Continuum Mechanics
External Organisation(s)
Northwestern Polytechnical University
Type
Article
Journal
Journal of tribology
Volume
131
Pages
1-10
No. of pages
10
ISSN
0742-4787
Publication date
04.2009
Publication status
Published
Peer reviewed
Yes
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Mechanics of Materials, Mechanical Engineering, Surfaces and Interfaces, Surfaces, Coatings and Films
Electronic version(s)
https://doi.org/10.1115/1.3063812 (Access: Closed)
 

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