Out-of-contact peeling caused by elastohydrodynamic deformation during viscous adhesion

Author:

Shao Xingchen1ORCID,Wang Yumo2ORCID,Frechette Joelle1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering Department, University of California 1 , Berkeley, California 94720, USA

2. National Engineering Laboratory for Pipeline Safety, Beijing Key Laboratory of Urban Oil and Gas Distribution Technology, China University of Petroleum, Beijing 2 , 18# Fuxue Road, Changping District, 102249 Beijing, China

Abstract

We report on viscous adhesion measurements conducted in sphere-plane geometry between a rigid sphere and soft surfaces submerged in silicone oils. Increasing the surface compliance leads to a decrease in the adhesive strength due to elastohydrodynamic deformation of the soft surface during debonding. The force-displacement and fluid film thickness-time data are compared to an elastohydrodynamic model that incorporates the force measuring spring and finds good agreement between the model and data. We calculate the pressure distribution in the fluid and find that, in contrast to debonding from rigid surfaces, the pressure drop is non-monotonic and includes the presence of stagnation points within the fluid film when a soft surface is present. In addition, viscous adhesion in the presence of a soft surface leads to a debonding process that occurs via a peeling front (located at a stagnation point), even in the absence of solid–solid contact. As a result of mass conservation, the elastohydrodynamic deformation of the soft surface during detachment leads to surfaces that come closer as the surfaces are separated. During detachment, there is a region with fluid drainage between the centerpoint and the stagnation point, while there is fluid infusion further out. Understanding and harnessing the coupling between lubrication pressure, elasticity, and surface interactions provides material design strategies for applications such as adhesives, coatings, microsensors, and biomaterials.

Funder

American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund

Directorate for Engineering

Science Foundation of China University of Petroleum, Beijing

National Natural Science Foundation of China-Guangdong Joint Fund

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Subject

Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,General Physics and Astronomy

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