Superlubric polycrystalline graphene interfaces

Xiang Gao, Wengen Ouyang, Michael Urbakh*, Oded Hod

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

25 Scopus citations

Abstract

The effects of corrugated grain boundaries on the frictional properties of extended planar graphitic contacts incorporating a polycrystalline surface are investigated via molecular dynamics simulations. The kinetic friction is found to be dominated by shear induced buckling and unbuckling of corrugated grain boundary dislocations, leading to a nonmonotonic behavior of the friction with normal load and temperature. The underlying mechanism involves two effects, where an increase of dislocation buckling probability competes with a decrease of the dissipated energy per buckling event. These effects are well captured by a phenomenological two-state model, that allows for characterizing the tribological properties of any large-scale polycrystalline layered interface, while circumventing the need for demanding atomistic simulations. The resulting negative differential friction coefficients obtained in the high-load regime can reduce the expected linear scaling of grain-boundary friction with surface area and restore structural superlubricity at increasing length-scales.

Original languageEnglish
Article number5694
JournalNature Communications
Volume12
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Dec 2021

Funding

FundersFunder number
Naomi Foundation1141/18
National Science Foundation of China and Israel Science Foundation3191/ 19
National Outstanding Youth Science Fund Project of National Natural Science Foundation of China11890674, 11890673
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Israel Science Foundation1586/17
Tel Aviv University
Wuhan University

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