4.5 Article

Energy exchange calculations in a simple mechanical system to investigate the origin of friction

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MODERN PHYSICS B
Volume 36, Issue 07N08, Pages -

Publisher

WORLD SCIENTIFIC PUBL CO PTE LTD
DOI: 10.1142/S0217979222400045

Keywords

Friction; molecular dynamics; energy exchange; nanotribology

Funding

  1. Centro Latinoamericano de Fsica (CLAF)
  2. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientfico e Tecnolgico (CNPq, Brasil)
  3. Coordena de Aperfeiamento de Pessoal de Nvel Superior \ Brasil (CAPES) \ Finance
  4. Funda de Amparo Pesquisa do Rio Grnade do Sul (FAPERGS-Brazil)

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The microscopic origin of friction is a significant topic in science and technology, with some aspects still remaining unsolved. By studying a simple 1D system, we have shed light on possible mechanisms for the emergence of friction at the macroscopic level, demonstrating that this simple model can exhibit rich and nontrivial behavior.
The microscopic origin of friction is an important topic in science and technology. To date, noteworthy aspects of it remain unsolved. In an effort to shed some light on the possible mechanisms that could give rise to the macroscopic emergence of friction, a very simple 1D system of two particles is considered, one of them is free but moving with an initial velocity, and the other confined by a harmonic potential. The two particles interact via a repulsive Gaussian potential. While it represents in a straightforward manner a tip substrate system in the real world, no analytic solutions can be found for its motion. Because of the interaction, the free particle (tip) may overcome the bound particle (substrate) losing part of its kinetic energy. We solve Newton's equations of the two particles numerically and calculate the net exchange of energy in the asymptotic state in terms of the relevant parameters of the problem. The effective dissipation that emerges from this simple, classical model with no ad hoc terms shows, surprisingly, a range of rich, nontrivial, behavior. We give theoretical reasoning which provides a satisfactory qualitative description. The essential ingredient of that reasoning is that the transfer of energy from the incoming particle to the confined one can be regarded as the source of the emergent dissipation force the friction experienced by the incoming particle.

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