4.6 Article

Precise Correlation of Contact Area and Forces in the Unstable Friction between a Rough Fluoroelastomer Surface and Borosilicate Glass

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 13, Issue 20, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma13204615

Keywords

elastomer stick-slip; in-situ microtribometry; machined seals

Funding

  1. Austrian Marshall Plan Foundation
  2. Polymer Competence Center Leoben GmbH by the Federal Ministry of Transport, Innovation and Technology
  3. Federal Ministry of Economics, Family and Youth
  4. Montanuniversitat Leoben
  5. SKF Sealing Solutions Austria GmbH
  6. state government of Styria
  7. state government of Lower Austria
  8. state government of Upper Austria
  9. federal government of Styria
  10. federal government of Lower Austria
  11. federal government of Upper Austria

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Stick-slip friction of elastomers arises due to adhesion, high local strains, surface features, and viscous dissipation. In situ techniques connecting the real contact area to interfacial forces can reveal the contact evolution of a rough elastomer surface leading up to gross slip, as well as provide high-resolution dynamic contact areas for improving current slip models. Samples with rough surfaces were produced by the same manufacturing processes as machined seals. In this work, a machined fluoroelastomer (FKM) hemisphere was slid against glass, and the stick-slip behavior was captured optically in situ. The influence of sliding velocity on sliding behavior was studied over a range of speeds from 1 mu m/s to 100 mu m/s. The real contact area was measured from image sequences thresholded using Otsu's method. The motion of the pinned region was delineated with a machine learning scheme. The first result is that, within the macroscale sticking, or pinned phase, local pinned and partial slip regions were observed and modeled as a combined contact with contributions to friction by both regions. As a second result, we identified a critical velocity below which the stick-slip motion converted from high frequency with low amplitude to low frequency with high amplitude. This study on the sliding behavior of a viscoelastic machined elastomer demonstrates a multi-technique approach which reveals precise changes in contact area before and during pinning and slip.

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