2008 APS March Meeting
Volume 53, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 10–14, 2008;
New Orleans, Louisiana
Session J39: Focus Session: Friction and Contact
11:15 AM–2:15 PM,
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Morial Convention Center
Room: 231
Sponsoring
Units:
DMP GSNP
Chair: Mark Robbins, Johns Hopkins University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2008.MAR.J39.7
Abstract: J39.00007 : Beller Lectureship Talk: Crack-like processes govern the onset of frictional motion
12:27 PM–1:03 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Jay Fineberg
(The Hebrew University)
The dynamics of frictional slip have been studied for hundreds of
years, yet many aspects of these everyday processes are not
understood. One such aspect is the onset of slip. First described
by Coulomb and Amontons as the transition from static to dynamic
friction, the onset of frictional slip is central to fields as
diverse as physics, tribology, the mechanics of earthquakes and
fracture. We study the dynamics of how this transition takes
place by performing real-time visualization of the \textit{true}
contact area which forms the interface separating two blocks of
like material.
The results show that the onset of frictional motion is driven by
the interplay of three different types of coherent crack-like
fronts, which propagate along the interface, reducing the contact
area as they progress. Two of these, whose propagation speeds
are, respectively, slightly below and significantly above the
shear wave velocity, appear to be related to known propagation
modes of shear cracks. The third type of front does not
correspond to known fracture modes. It propagates over an order
of magnitude more slowly, and is the most efficient of the three
modes in reducing contact area along the interface.
We first show that, at applied stresses that are well below the
(Coulomb-Amontons) threshold for the onset of frictional motion,
significant precursor activity occurs along the interface. This
activity is comprised of propagating (subsonic) shear cracks
which arrest before traversing the entire interface. In their
wake, these ``precursor'' cracks systematically transform the
intial spatially uniform contact area along the interface to a
highly nonuniform one. \textit{Only} at the transition to overall
motion will these precursor cracks simultaneously excite, at
their point of arrest, both the slow propagation modes and the
intersonic ones. Until to this point, no overall frictional
motion occurs. Frictional sliding only takes place when
either the slow modes or additional shear cracks excited by the
slow modes traverse the entire interface.
These results suggest that to understand the transition to
frictional motion, the dynamics of this entire chain of events
must be taken into account.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2008.MAR.J39.7