Understanding and harnessing the coupling between lubrication pressure and
elasticity provides materials design strategies for applications such as
adhesives, coatings, microsensors, and biomaterials. Elastic deformation of
compliant solids caused by viscous forces can also occur during dynamic force
measurements in instruments such as the surface forces apparatus (SFA) or the
atomic force microscope (AFM). We briefly review hydrodynamic interactions in
the presence of soft, deformable interfaces in the lubrication limit. More
specifically, we consider the scenario of two surfaces approaching each other
in a viscous fluid where one or both surfaces is deformable, which is also
relevant to many force measurement systems. In this article the basic
theoretical background of the elastohydrodynamic problem is detailed, followed
by a discussion of experimental validation and considerations, especially for
the role of elastic deformation on surface forces measurements. Finally,
current challenges to our understanding of soft hydrodynamic interactions, such
as the consideration of substrate layering, poroelasticity, viscoelasticity,
surface heterogeneity, as well as their implications are discussed