4.8 Article

Ice friction at the nanoscale

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2209545119

Keywords

tribology; lubrication; slip; premelting; quasi-liquid layer

Funding

  1. Spanish Agencia Estatal de Investigacion [PIP2020-115722GB-C21]
  2. Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion
  3. Juan de la Cierva fellowship [FJC2019-041329-I]

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This study investigates the atomic-scale friction behavior of ice during sliding using computer simulations. The results show that the lubricating properties of ice can be controlled by altering the material of the slider, temperature, and pressure. This research is significant for understanding the microscopic mechanisms of ice slipperiness.
The origin of ice slipperiness has been a matter of great controversy for more than a century, but an atomistic understanding of ice friction is still lacking. Here, we perform computer simulations of an atomically smooth substrate sliding on ice. In a large temperature range between 230 and 266 K, hydrophobic sliders exhibit a premelting layer similar to that found at the ice/air interface. On the contrary, hydrophilic sliders show larger premelting and a strong increase of the first adsorption layer. The nonequilibrium simulations show that premelting films of barely one-nanometer thickness are sufficient to provide a lubricating quasi-liquid layer with rheological properties similar to bulk undercooled water. Upon shearing, the films display a pattern consistent with lubricating Couette flow, but the boundary conditions at the wall vary strongly with the substrate's interactions. Hydrophobic walls exhibit large slip, while hydrophilic walls obey stick boundary conditions with small negative slip. By compressing ice above atmospheric pressure, the lubricating layer grows continuously, and the rheological properties approach bulk-like behavior. Below 260 K, the equilibrium premelting films decrease significantly. However, a very large slip persists on the hydrophobic walls, while the increased friction on hydrophilic walls is sufficient to melt ice and create a lubrication layer in a few nanoseconds. Our results show that the atomic-scale frictional behavior of ice is a combination of spontaneous premelting, pressure melting, and frictional heating.

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