Partial contact between elastic surfaces with periodic profiles

Author(s):  
W. Manners
Author(s):  
E. Cerda ◽  
L. Mahadevan

We consider two of the simplest problems associated with the packing of a naturally flat thin elastic sheet. Both problems involve packing the sheet into a hollow cylinder; the first considers the partial contact of a cylindrically curved sheet with a cylindrical surface, while the second considers the partial contact of a conically curved sheet with the edge of a cylindrical surface. In each case, we solve the free–boundary problems to determine the shape, response and stability of the confined surfaces. In particular, we show that an exact description of both the cylindrical and conical structures is given by solutions of the Elastica equation, allowing us to present a unified description of a large class of elastic developable surfaces. This includes what is possibly the simplest example of strain localization, occurring at a point and forming one of the constituent elements of a crumpled elastic sheet.


2018 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. 2443-2456
Author(s):  
Roberto Guarino ◽  
Gianluca Costagliola ◽  
Federico Bosia ◽  
Nicola Maria Pugno

In many biological structures, optimized mechanical properties are obtained through complex structural organization involving multiple constituents, functional grading and hierarchical organization. In the case of biological surfaces, the possibility to modify the frictional and adhesive behaviour can also be achieved by exploiting a grading of the material properties. In this paper, we investigate this possibility by considering the frictional sliding of elastic surfaces in the presence of a spatial variation of the Young’s modulus and the local friction coefficients. Using finite-element simulations and a two-dimensional spring-block model, we investigate how graded material properties affect the macroscopic frictional behaviour, in particular, static friction values and the transition from static to dynamic friction. The results suggest that the graded material properties can be exploited to reduce static friction with respect to the corresponding non-graded material and to tune it to desired values, opening possibilities for the design of bio-inspired surfaces with tailor-made tribological properties.


Author(s):  
Du Chen ◽  
David D. Bogy

A nonlinear dynamic model is developed to analyze the bouncing vibration of a partial contact air bearing slider, which is designed for the areal recording density in hard disk drives of 1 Tbit/in2 or even higher. In this model the air bearing with contact is modeled using the generalized Reynolds equation modified with the Fukui-Kaneko slip correction and a new second order slip correction for the contact situation [1]. The adhesion, contact and friction between the slider and the disk are also considered in the model. It is found that the disk surface roughness, which moves into the head disk interface (HDI) as the disk rotates, excites the bouncing vibrations of the partial contact slider. The frequency spectra of the slider’s bouncing vibration have high frequency components that correspond to the slider-disk contact.


1939 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. A49-A53 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. M. Westergaard

Abstract The task is undertaken of determining the bearing pressures, and the stresses and deformations created by them, in some cases that differ from those considered by Hertz in his classical study of contact. Thus two solids are examined which, before loading, are in contact along a row of evenly spaced lines in a horizontal plane, as indicated in Fig. 1(a). Between these lines the surfaces have a separation defined by a nearly flat cosine wave. A uniform pressure on top of the upper solid creates contact over an area consisting of a row of strips, reduces the separation of the solids between the strips, as suggested in Fig. 1(b), and creates contact pressures distributed as indicated in Fig. 1(c), with vertical rises in the diagram of pressure at the edges of the strips. At a greater load the width of the strip becomes equal to the wave length, and the contact is complete. At still greater loads the stresses increase as if the two solids were one. The procedure by which this problem is solved is demonstrated first by showing its easy application to some well-known cases, especially Hertz’s problem of circular cylinders in contact. Further applications are to a noncircular cylinder resting on a solid with a flat top, with an initial separation of the surfaces varying as the fourth power of the distance from the initial line of contact; to partial contact of two surfaces which are initially plane, except that one of them has a ridge or several parallel ridges; and to some related problems in which two parts of the same body are partially separated by the forming of one or more cracks.


Author(s):  
Mengxiong Liu ◽  
Zhiming Xue ◽  
Yafei Wang ◽  
Xide Li ◽  
Changguo Wang
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