4.7 Article

On the effective surface energy in viscoelastic Hertzian contacts

Journal

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmps.2021.104669

Keywords

Viscoelasticity; Adhesion hysteresis; Effective surface energy; Crack propagation; Finite element modelling

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research (MIUR)
  2. project ''FASTire (Foam Airless Spoked Tire): Smart Airless Tyres for Extremely-Low Rolling Resistance and Superior Passengers Comfort'' - Italian MIUR [2017948FEN]

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The study developed a comprehensive deterministic model describing the adhesive interactions of a rigid sphere in contact with a viscoelastic half-space, finding that the effective surface energy increases with the contact line velocity in loading-unloading cycles under different driving conditions.
Viscoelasticity and rate-dependent adhesion of soft matter lead to difficulties in modelling the 'relatively simple' problem of a rigid sphere in contact with a viscoelastic half-space. For this reason, approximations in describing surface interactions and viscous dissipation processes are usually adopted in the literature. Here, we develop a fully deterministic model in which adhesive interactions are described by Lennard-Jones potential and the material behaviour with the standard linear solid model. Normal loading-unloading cycles are carried out under different driving conditions. When loading is performed in quasi-static conditions and, hence, unloading starts from a completely relaxed state of the material, the effective surface energy is found to monotonically increase with the contact line velocity up to an asymptotic value reached at high unloading rates. Such result agrees with existing theories on viscoelastic crack propagation. If loading and unloading are performed at the same non-zero driving velocity and, hence, unloading starts from an unrelaxed state of the material, the trend of the effective surface energy Delta gamma(eff) with the contact line velocity is described by a bell-shaped function in a double-logarithmic plot. The peak of Delta gamma(eff) is found at a contact line velocity smaller than that makes maximum the tangent loss of the viscoelastic modulus. Furthermore, we show Gent&Schultz assumption partly works in this case as viscous dissipation is no longer localized along the contact perimeter but it also occurs in the bulk material.

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