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Contact area

About: Contact area is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 12358 publications have been published within this topic receiving 256401 citations. The topic is also known as: contact patch & contact region.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Atomistic simulations are used to test the equations of continuum contact mechanics in nanometer scale contacts and the atomic scale roughness present on any tip made of discrete atoms is shown to have profound effects on the results.
Abstract: Atomistic simulations are used to test the equations of continuum contact mechanics in nanometer scale contacts. Nominally spherical tips, made by bending crystals or cutting crystalline or amorphous solids, are pressed into a flat, elastic substrate. The normal displacement, contact radius, stress distribution, friction, and lateral stiffness are examined as a function of load and adhesion. The atomic scale roughness present on any tip made of discrete atoms is shown to have profound effects on the results. Contact areas, local stresses, and the work of adhesion change by factors of 2 to 4, and the friction and lateral stiffness vary by orders of magnitude. The microscopic factors responsible for these changes are discussed. The results are also used to test methods for analyzing experimental data with continuum theory to determine information, such as contact area, that cannot be measured directly in nanometer scale contacts. Even when the data appear to be fit by continuum theory, extracted quantities can differ substantially from their true values.

147 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a study concerning the hardness and the Young's modulus results determined by Vickers indentation on different materials was performed, and two methods were proposed for performing the indentation geometrical calibration of the contact area; these are compared with a former method proposed by Oliver and Pharr (OP).
Abstract: Depth-sensing indentation equipment is widely used for evaluation of the hardness and Young's modulus of materials. The depth resolution of this technique allows the use of ultra-low loads. However, aspects related to the determination of the contact area under indentation should be cautiously considered when using this equipment. These are related to the geometrical imperfections of the tip, the diamond pyramidal punch and the formation of pileup or the presence of sink-in, which alter the shape and size of the indent. These and other aspects, such as the thermal drift of the equipment and the scattering at the zero indentation depth position related to surface finishing, are discussed in this work. A study concerning the hardness and the Young's modulus results determined by Vickers indentation on different materials was performed. Samples of fused silica, BK7 glass, aluminium, copper and mild steel (for which the values of Young's modulus were previously known) were tested using indentation loads in the range 10–1000 mN. Moreover, two methods are proposed for performing the indentation geometrical calibration of the contact area; these are compared with a former method proposed by Oliver and Pharr (OP). The present methods are based on: (i) analysis of the punch profile using atomic force microscopy (AFM); and (ii) a linear penetration-depth function correction (LM), based on knowledge of the values of the Young's modulus of several materials. By applying these methods to the indentation load/indentation depth results, it was possible to draw some conclusions about the benefit of the AFM and LM methods now under proposal.

146 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This simulation expands previous models to characterize the adhesive interaction between asymmetrical particles, characteristic of a polishing slurry, and various films, and predicts a more accurate adhesive force than predictions based upon an ideal van der Waals model.

146 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results show that in pure compression, the external axial force is transmitted primarily by the intervertebral disc, and the facet joints carry only a small percentage of the force, whereas in small flexion they carry none.

145 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The maximal three-phase contact line attainable along the actual droplet boundary is found to be a direct and linear parameter that decides the depinning force on the superhydrophobic surface.
Abstract: This study explores how surface morphology affects the dynamics of contact line depinning of an evaporating sessile droplet on micropillared superhydrophobic surfaces. The result shows that neither a liquid-solid contact area nor an apparent contact line is a critical physical parameter to determine the depinning force. The configuration of a contact line on a superhydrophobic surface is multimodal, composed of both two phases (liquid and air) and three phases (liquid, solid, and air). The multimodal state is dynamically altered when a droplet recedes. The maximal three-phase contact line attainable along the actual droplet boundary is found to be a direct and linear parameter that decides the depinning force on the superhydrophobic surface.

145 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023102
2022253
2021375
2020467
2019554
2018528