378 research outputs found
Influence of self-affine roughness on the friction coefficient of rubber at high sliding velocity
In this work we investigate the influence of self-affine roughness on the friction coefficient of a rubber body onto a solid surface at high speeds. The roughness is characterized by the rms amplitude w, the correlation length ξ, and the roughness exponent H. It is shown that the friction coefficient decreases with increasing correlation length ξ and increasing roughness exponent H for sufficiently large correlation lengths. However, for small correlation lengths the opposite behavior takes place because the system is within the strong roughness limit or equivalently average local surface slopes larger than 1. Moreover, direct plots of the friction coefficient as a function of the roughness exponent H indicate that as the correlation length ξ decreases, a maximum of the friction coefficient develops. The latter is followed by a continous increment of the friction coefficient with increasing H and decreasing ξ.
Influence of self-affine roughness on Parsons-Zobel plots for electrical double layers
In this paper we investigate the dependence of Parsons-Zobel plots on characteristic self-affine roughness parameters of the metal electrode in electrical double layers. Among the roughness amplitude w, the correlation length ξ, and roughness exponent H, the latter appears to have the most prominent effect especially for values in the range H<0.5. In addition, with decreasing compact layer thickness the influence of roughness leads to stronger nonlinear behavior of the plots for relatively large electrode potentials. Finally, it is shown that dynamic changes of the electrode roughness (for example by growth on metal films) should be carefully quantified with respect to their influence on the Parson-Zobel plots and related double-layer systems.
Influence of random roughness on cantilever resonance frequency
In this paper we investigate the influence of random roughness on the oscillation frequency of cantilevers coated with thin film overlayers. First the theory expressions for the roughness-induced frequency shift are derived using the cantilever equation of motion. Subsequently it is shown that the roughness induced shift depends on the particular roughness parameters, assuming the general case of self-affine rough surfaces for the overlayer film, the material properties of the overlayer film, and the dimensions mainly of the bare cantilever. Indeed it is shown that the roughness influence becomes significant for relatively thin cantilevers (≤1 µm), and increased local surface slopes (>0.5) within the limits of applicability of the proposed formalism. The results of this study can be used in high precision frequency sensing applications in the field of micro/nanomechanics.
Graphene-on-silicon near-field thermophotovoltaic cell
A graphene layer on top of a dielectric can dramatically influence ability of
the material to radiative heat transfer. This property of graphene is used to
improve the performance and reduce costs of near-field thermophotovoltaic
cells. Instead of low bandgap semiconductors it is proposed to use
graphene-on-silicon Schottky photovoltaic cells. One layer of graphene absorbs
around 90% of incoming radiation and increases the heat transfer. This is due
to excitation of plasmons in graphene, which are automatically tuned in
resonance with the emitted light in the mid infrared range. The absorbed
radiation excites electron-hole pairs in graphene, which are separated by the
surface field induced by the Schottky barrier. For a quasi-monochromatic source
the generated power is one order of magnitude larger and efficiency is on the
same level as for semiconductor photovoltaic cells.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev. Applie
Random surface roughness influence on gas damped nanoresonators
The author investigates quantitatively the influence of random surface roughness on the quality factor Q of nanoresonators due to noise by impinging gas molecules. The roughness is characterized by the amplitude w, the correlation length ξ, and the roughness exponent H that describes fine roughness details at short wavelengths. Surface roughening (decreasing H and increasing ratio w/ξ) leads to lower Q, which translates to lower sensitivity to external perturbations, and a higher limit to mass sensitivity. The influence of the exponent H is shown to be important as that of w/ξ, indicating the necessity for precise control of the surface morphology.
Surface roughness influence on parametric amplification of nanoresonators in presence of thermomechanical and environmental noise
We investigate the surface roughness influence on the gain from parametric amplification in nanoresonators in the presence of thermomechanical and momentum exchange noise. The roughness is characterized by the rms amplitude w, the correlation length, and the roughness exponent 0. <H <1. It is found that the gain strongly increases with increasing roughening (decreasing H and/or increasing ratio w/xi) due to the increment in capacitive coupling, which plays a dominant role when the intrinsic quality factor Q(in) is comparable or lower than the quality factor Q(gas) due to gas collisions. However, for Q(in) >> Q(gas), the influence of surface roughness on the gain strongly diminishes
Adhesion of elastic films on mound rough surfaces
In this work, we have investigated the adhesive behaviour of elastic films in contact with solid substrates, which are bounded by mound surface roughness. This type of roughness is described by the rms roughness amplitude w, the average mound separation Lambda, and the system correlation length zeta. It is shown that both lateral roughness parameters Lambda and zeta strongly influence adhesive characteristics. Indeed, with increasing elastic film modulus E, film adhesion is only possible for sufficiently large mound separations Lambda. Moreover, the critical elastic modulus E-c (for which spontaneous film decohesion takes place for E > E-c) is shown to increase fast with increasing mound separation Lambda when Lambda less than or equal to zeta, while as a function of the system correlation length it increases relatively fast when zeta less than or equal to Lambda. (C) 2003 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved
Static and dynamic aspects of the demagnetizing factor in magnetic thin films with random rough surfaces
We investigate static and dynamic aspects of the demagnetizing factor N in magnetic thin films with random rough surfaces which are described by the rms amplitude Δ, the correlation length ξ, and the roughness exponent H (0⩽H⩽1). The demagnetizing factor decreases as the surface smoothens (increasing H and/or decreasing ratio Δ/ξ), with the exponent H yielding a comparable contribution to N as the roughness ratio Δ/ξ. Moreover, for growing films with self-affine surfaces, N decreases with film thickness, closely as a power law for large roughness exponents (H∼1). Finally, estimates of the demagnetizing factor based on sinusoidal models are shown to be inadequate since they neglect fine roughness details at short wavelengths (<ξ) as depicted by the roughness exponent H
Influence of random roughness on cantilever curvature sensitivity
In this work we explore the influence of random surface roughness on the
cantilever sensitivity to respond to curvature changes induced by changes in
surface stress. The roughness is characterized by the out-of-plane roughness
amplitude w, the lateral correlation length x, and the roughness or Hurst
exponent H (0<H<1). The cantilever sensitivity is found to decrease with
increasing roughness (decreasing H and/or increasing ratio w/x) or equivalently
increasing local surface slope. Finally, analytic expressions of the cantilever
sensitivity as a function of the parameters w, x, and H are derived in order to
allow direct implementation in sensing systems.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Repulsive Casimir forces between solid materials with high refractive index intervening liquids
In order to explore repulsive Casimir/van der Waals forces between solid
materials with liquid as the intervening medium, we analyze dielectric data for
a wide range of materials as for example PTFE, polystyrene, silica and more
than twenty liquids. Although significant variation in the dielectric data from
different sources exist, we provide a scheme based on measured static
dielectric constants, refractive indices, and applying Kramers Kronig (KK)
consistency to dielectric data to create accurate dielectric functions at
imaginary frequencies. The latter is necessary for more accurate force
calculations via the Lifshitz theory allowing reliable predictions of repulsive
Casimir forces.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figures, 1 tabl
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