Chan Nicholas, Vazirisereshk Mohammad R, Martini Ashlie, Egberts Philip
Department of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, University of Calgary 2500 Drive NW Calgary Alberta T2N 1N4 Canada
School of Engineering, University of California Merced 5200N Lake Road Merced California 95343 USA
Nanoscale Adv. 2020 Jul 24;2(9):4117-4124. doi: 10.1039/d0na00414f. eCollection 2020 Sep 16.
Friction in nanoscale contacts is determined by the size and structure of the interface that is hidden between the contacting bodies. One approach to investigating the origins of friction is to measure electrical conductivity as a proxy for contact size and structure. However, the relationships between contact, friction and conductivity are not fully understood, limiting the usefulness of such measurements for interpreting dynamic sliding properties. Here, atomic force microscopy (AFM) was used to simultaneously acquire lattice resolution images of the lateral force and current flow through the tip-sample contact formed between a highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) sample and a conductive diamond AFM probe to explore the underlying mechanisms and correlations between friction and conductivity. Both current and lateral force exhibited fluctuations corresponding to the periodicity of the HOPG lattice. Unexpectedly, while lateral force increased during stick events of atomic stick-slip, the current decreased exponentially. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of a simple model system reproduced these trends and showed that the origin of the inverse correlation between current and lateral force during atomic stick-slip was atom-atom distance across the contact. The simulations further demonstrated transitions between crystallographic orientation during slip events were reflected in both lateral force and current. These results confirm that the correlation between conduction and atom-atom distance previously proposed for stationary contacts can be extended to sliding contacts in the stick-slip regime.
纳米级接触中的摩擦力由隐藏在接触物体之间的界面的尺寸和结构决定。研究摩擦起源的一种方法是测量电导率,以此作为接触尺寸和结构的替代指标。然而,接触、摩擦和电导率之间的关系尚未完全明晰,这限制了此类测量在解释动态滑动特性方面的实用性。在此,利用原子力显微镜(AFM)同时获取横向力的晶格分辨率图像以及通过高度定向热解石墨(HOPG)样品与导电金刚石AFM探针之间形成的针尖 - 样品接触的电流,以探究摩擦与电导率之间的潜在机制和相关性。电流和横向力均表现出与HOPG晶格周期性相对应的波动。出乎意料的是,在原子级黏滑的黏附阶段,横向力增加,而电流呈指数下降。一个简单模型系统的分子动力学(MD)模拟重现了这些趋势,并表明原子级黏滑过程中电流与横向力之间负相关的起源是接触处的原子 - 原子间距。模拟进一步表明,滑移过程中晶体取向的转变在横向力和电流中均有体现。这些结果证实,先前针对静态接触提出的传导与原子 - 原子间距之间 的相关性可扩展至黏滑状态下的滑动接触。