4.5 Article

Relaxation and Recovery in Hydrogel Friction on Smooth Surfaces

期刊

EXPERIMENTAL MECHANICS
卷 61, 期 7, 页码 1081-1092

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11340-021-00748-z

关键词

Hydrogel; Friction; Polymer; Tribology

资金

  1. NSF DMR [14550869]
  2. Emory SURE summer program for undergraduate research

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Hydrogels pressed against smooth surfaces exhibit time-dependent frictional behavior characterized by sliding-induced relaxation and quiescent recovery processes. The friction coefficient decays exponentially to a steady-state value, with the time constant varying exponentially with sliding velocity. Frictional shearing of the interface can imprint an observable memory on the material, visible after 24 hours of repeated friction.
Background Hydrogels are crosslinked polymer networks that can absorb and retain a large fraction of liquid. Near a critical sliding velocity, hydrogels pressed against smooth surfaces exhibit time-dependent frictional behavior occurring over multiple timescales. The origin of these dynamics is unresolved Objective Here, we characterize this time-dependent regime and show that it is consistent with two distinct molecular processes: sliding-induced relaxation and quiescent recovery. Methods Our experiments use a custom pin-on-disk tribometer to examine poly(acrylic acid) hydrogels on smooth poly(methyl methacrylate) surfaces over a variety of sliding conditions, from minutes to hours. Results We show that at a fixed sliding velocity, the friction coefficient decays exponentially and reaches a steady-state value. The time constant associated with this decay varies exponentially with the sliding velocity, and is sensitive to any precedent frictional shearing of the interface. This process is reversible; upon cessation of sliding, the friction coefficient recovers to its original state. We also show that the initial direction of shear can be imprinted as an observable memory, and is visible after 24 hrs of repeated frictional shearing. Conclusions We attribute this behavior to nanoscale extension and relaxation dynamics of the near-surface polymer network, leading to a model of frictional relaxation and recovery with two parallel timescales.

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