You are here
Enhancement of adhesion strength through microvibrations: Modeling and experiments
AbstractHigh-frequency micrometrical vibrations have been shown to greatly influence the adhesive performance of soft interfaces, however a detailed comparison between theoretical predictions and experimental results is still missing. Here, the problem of a rigid spherical indenter, hung on a soft spring, that is unloaded from an adhesive viscoelastic vibrating substrate is considered. The experimental tests were performed by unloading a borosilicate glass lens from a soft PDMS substrate excited by high-frequency micrometrical vibrations. We show that as soon as the vibration starts, the contact area increases abruptly and during unloading it decreases following approximately the JKR classical model, but with a much increased work of adhesion with respect to its thermodynamic value. We find that the pull-off force increases with the amplitude of vibration up to a certain saturation level, which appeared to be frequency dependent. Under the hypothesis of short range adhesion, a lumped mechanical model was derived, which, starting from an independent characterization of the rate-dependent interfacial adhesion, predicted qualitatively and quantitatively the experimental results, without the need of any adjustable parameters. Link to the editorial verion of the paper: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmps.2024.106020 RG profile: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Antonio-Papangelo-2
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
Tricarico et al 2025 - Enhancement of adhesion strength through microvibrations.pdf | 2.46 MB |
- Antonio Papangelo's blog
- Log in or register to post comments
- 18 reads
Recent comments