Landman U, Luedtke W D, Burnham N A, Colton R J
Science. 1990 Apr 27;248(4954):454-61. doi: 10.1126/science.248.4954.454.
Molecular dynamics simulations and atomic force microscopy are used to investigate the atomistic mechanisms of adhesion, contact formation, nanoindentation, separation, and fracture that occur when a nickel tip interacts with a gold surface. The theoretically predicted and experimentally measured hysteresis in the force versus tip-to-sample distance relationship, found upon approach and subsequent separation of the tip from the sample, is related to inelastic deformation of the sample surface characterized by adhesion of gold atoms to the nickel tip and formation of a connective neck of atoms. At small tipsample distances, mechanical instability causes the tip and surface to jump-to-contact, which in turn leads to adhesion-induced wetting of the nickel tip by gold atoms. Subsequent indentation of the substrate results in the onset of plastic deformation of the gold surface. The atomic-scale mechanisms underlying the formation and elongation of a connective neck, which forms upon separation, consist of structural transformations involving elastic and yielding stages.
分子动力学模拟和原子力显微镜被用于研究镍尖端与金表面相互作用时发生的粘附、接触形成、纳米压痕、分离和断裂的原子机制。在尖端靠近样品随后又与样品分离时,在力与尖端到样品距离的关系中理论预测和实验测量到的滞后现象,与样品表面的非弹性变形有关,这种非弹性变形的特征是金原子粘附到镍尖端并形成原子连接颈。在小的尖端-样品距离下,机械不稳定性导致尖端和表面跳跃式接触,这反过来又导致金原子对镍尖端的粘附诱导润湿。随后对基底的压痕导致金表面开始塑性变形。分离时形成并伸长的连接颈背后的原子尺度机制,包括涉及弹性和屈服阶段的结构转变。