Evolution of real contact area under shear and the value of static friction of soft materials
Author(s) -
Riad Sahli,
Gaël Pallares,
Christophe Ducottet,
I Ali,
Samer Al Akhrass,
M. Guibert,
Julien Scheibert
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.011
H-Index - 771
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.1706434115
Subject(s) - static friction , contact area , dynamical friction , materials science , mechanics , shear (geology) , natural rubber , contact mechanics , soft materials , composite material , structural engineering , nanotechnology , physics , engineering , finite element method
The frictional properties of a rough contact interface are controlled by its area of real contact, the dynamical variations of which underlie our modern understanding of the ubiquitous rate-and-state friction law. In particular, the real contact area is proportional to the normal load, slowly increases at rest through aging, and drops at slip inception. Here, through direct measurements on various contacts involving elastomers or human fingertips, we show that the real contact area also decreases under shear, with reductions as large as 30[Formula: see text], starting well before macroscopic sliding. All data are captured by a single reduction law enabling excellent predictions of the static friction force. In elastomers, the area-reduction rate of individual contacts obeys a scaling law valid from micrometer-sized junctions in rough contacts to millimeter-sized smooth sphere/plane contacts. For the class of soft materials used here, our results should motivate first-order improvements of current contact mechanics models and prompt reinterpretation of the rate-and-state parameters.
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