AVS 61st International Symposium & Exhibition
    Fundamentals & Biological, Energy and Environmental Applications of Quartz Crystal Microbalance Focus Topic Thursday Sessions
       Session QC+AS+BI+MN-ThP

Paper QC+AS+BI+MN-ThP2
Mechanics of Multicontact Interfaces Studied with a QCM

Thursday, November 13, 2014, 6:00 pm, Room Hall D

Session: Fundamentals & Biological, Energy and Environmental Applications of Quartz Crystal Microbalance Poster Session
Presenter: Arne Langhoff, Clausthal University of Technology, Germany
Authors: R. König, Clausthal University of Technology, Germany
S. Hanke, Clausthal University of Technology, Germany
J. Vlachová, Clausthal University of Technology, Germany
D. Johannsmann, Clausthal University of Technology, Germany
A. Langhoff, Clausthal University of Technology, Germany
Correspondent: Click to Email

The contact stiffness and the contact strength at interfaces between rough surfaces are of outstanding relevance in many different fields, including mechanical engineering, bio-lubrication, and technical tribology.

Individual sphere-plate contacts have been previously investigated with a QCM and it was found that the contact stiffness can be inferred from the frequency shift, where the latter is positive because contact increases the overall stiffness of the composite resonator. At elevated amplitude of oscillation, the apparent contact stiffness decreases because of partial slip. Partial slip (also: “microslip”) describes the situation, where a contact partly sticks and partly slips. Sticking mostly is observed in the center. Slip is found at the edges, where the local stress is large.

The presentation describes the extension of this work to multicontact interfaces as well as the new results which were found with the single contacts . Generally speaking, multicontact interfaces differ from individual contacts by, firstly, a broad distribution of contact size and contact strength and, secondly, by an elastic coupling between neighboring load-bearing asperities.

Different materials (aluminum, PMMA) and different characteristic scales of roughness (all in the range of many microns) were studied. The focus is on polymer surfaces, which where treated with an abrasive paper. A novel geometry, where the resonator is symmetrically loaded with the same type of sample from both sides, has allowed to increase the normal force by a factor of 10, compared to previous experiments.

At small amplitudes, the frequency response of the QCM to a contact with rough PMMA surfaces is similar to the behavior observed with individual sphere-plate contacts. There is an increase in resonance frequency, which can be converted to an interfacial stiffness. Interesting, the contact stiffness observed with MHz excitation was found to much higher than what has been found similar samples with excitation frequencies in the kHz range.

At elevated amplitudes, the behavior is variable. Often one finds partial slip. Occasionally, however, there is a sharp increase in contact stiffness at a certain threshold in amplitude. The bandwidth goes through a maximum at that same amplitude. The behavior is reversible; the threshold is the same for decreasing and increasing amplitude ramps. We tentatively associate the increased apparent stiffness with an oscillation-induced increase in contact area.

[1] S. Hanke, J. Petri, D. Johannsmann, Phys. Rev. E 2013, 88.

[2] P. Berthoud, T. Baumberger, Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences 1998, 454, 1615–1634.