56 research outputs found

    Poroelastic indentation of mechanically confined hydrogel layers

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    We report on the poroelastic indentation response of hydrogel thin films geometrically confined within contacts with rigid spherical probes of radii in the millimeter range. Poly(PEGMA) (poly(ethylene glycol)) methyl ether methacrylate), poly(DMA) (dimethylacrylamide) and poly(NIPAM) (\textit{N}-isopropylacrylamide) gel films with thickness less than 15 μ\mum were grafted onto glass substrates using a thiol-ene click chemistry route. Changes in the indentation depth under constant applied load were monitored over time as a function of the film thickness and the radius of curvature of the probe using an interferometric method. In addition, shear properties of the indented films were measured using a lateral contact method. In the case of poly(PEGMA) films, we show that poroelastic indentation behavior is adequately described within the framework of an approximate contact model derived within the limits of confined contact geometries. This model provides simple scaling laws for the characteristic poroelastic time and the equilibrium indentation depth. Conversely, deviations from this model are evidenced for poly(DMA) and poly(NIPAM) films. From lateral contact experiments, these deviations are found to result from strong changes in the shear properties as a result of glass transition (poly(DMA)) or phase separation (poly(NIPAM)) phenomena induced by the drainage of the confined films squeezed between the rigid substrates

    Local friction at a sliding interface between an elastomer and a rigid spherical probe

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    This paper reports on spatially resolved measurements of the shear stress distribution at a frictional interface between a flat rubber substrate and a glass lens. Silicone rubber specimens marked close to their surface by a colored pattern have been prepared in order to measure the surface displacement field induced by the steady-state friction of the spherical probe. The deconvolution of this displacement field then provides the actual shear stress distribution at the contact interface. When a smooth glass lens is used, a nearly constant shear stress is achieved within the contact. On the other hand, a bell-shaped shear stress distribution is obtained with rough lenses. These first results suggest that simple notions of real contact area and constant interface shear stress cannot account for the observed changes in local friction when roughness is varied

    Rate-dependent adhesion of viscoelastic contacts. Part II: Numerical model and hysteresis dissipation

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    International audienceIn this paper, we propose a numerical model to describe the adhesive normal contact between a 'rigid' spherical indenter and a viscoelastic rough substrate. The model accounts for dissipative process under the assumption that viscoelastic losses are localized at the (micro)-contact lines. Numerical predictions are then compared with experimental measurements, which show a strong adhesion hysteresis mostly due to viscous energy dissipation occurring during pull-off. This hysteresis is satisfactorily described by the contact model which allows to distinguish the energy loss due to material dissipation from the adhesion hysteresis due to elastic instability. Our analysis shows that the pull-off force required to detach the surfaces is strongly influenced by the detachment rate and the rms roughness amplitude, but it is almost unaffected by the maximum load from which unloading starts. Moreover, the increase in the boundary line separating contact and non-contact regions, observed when moving from smooth to rough contacts, negligibly affects the viscous dissipation. Such increase is much less significant than the reduction in contact area, which therefore is the main parameter governing the strong decrease in the effective surface energy

    Rate-dependent adhesion of viscoelastic contacts, Part I: Contact area and contact line velocity within model randomly rough surfaces

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    International audienceIn this work, we investigate dissipative effects involved during the detachment of a smooth spherical glass probe from a viscoelastic silicone substrate patterned with micro-asperities. As a baseline, the pull-off of a single asperity, millimeter-sized contact between a glass lens and a smooth poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) rubber is first investigated as a function of the imposed detachment velocity. From a measurement of the contact radius () and normal load during unloading phase, the dependence of the strain energy release rate on the velocity of the contact line = ∕ is determined under the assumption that viscoelastic dissipation is localized at the edge of the contact. These data are incorporated into Muller's model (Muller, 1999) in order to predict the time-dependence of the contact size. Similar pull-off experiments are carried out with the same PDMS substrate patterned with spherical micro-asperities with a prescribed height distribution. From in situ optical measurements of the micro-contacts, scaling laws are identified for the contact radius and the contact line velocity. On the basis of the observed similarity between macro and microscale contacts, a numerical solution is developed to predict the reduction of the contact radius during unloading
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