4.6 Article

Impact of Static Distortion Waves on Superlubricity

Journal

ACS OMEGA
Volume 8, Issue 45, Pages 42457-42466

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.3c05044

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Friction is a significant source of energy loss in mechanical devices, which can be minimized through superlubricity. The study of incommensurate interface structures is crucial for achieving superlubricity, but current calculations face limitations. By utilizing a machine-learned method, we are able to accurately calculate the energy and forces of large-scale atomic structures, enabling us to quantify the breakdown of superlubricity in incommensurate structures and derive design principles.
Friction is a major source of energy loss in mechanical devices. This energy loss may be minimized by creating interfaces with extremely reduced friction, i.e., superlubricity. Conventional wisdom holds that incommensurate interface structures facilitate superlubricity. Accurately describing friction necessitates the precise modeling of the interface structure. This, in turn, requires the use of accurate first-principles electronic structure methods, especially when studying organic/metal interfaces, which are highly relevant due to their tunability and propensity to form incommensurate structures. However, the system size required to calculate incommensurate structures renders such calculations intractable. As a result, studies of incommensurate interfaces have been limited to very simple model systems or strongly simplified methodology. We overcome this limitation by developing a machine-learned interatomic potential that is able to determine energies and forces for structures containing thousands to tens of thousands of atoms with an accuracy comparable to conventional first-principles methods but at a fraction of the cost. Using this approach, we quantify the breakdown of superlubricity in incommensurate structures due to the formation of static distortion waves. Moreover, we extract design principles to engineer incommensurate interface systems where the formation of static distortion waves is suppressed, which facilitates low friction coefficients.

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