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Contact, Adhesion and Rupture of Elastic Solids

Inglese · Copertina rigida

Descrizione

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In 1970 an investigation into rubber friction, sponsored by a manufacturer of automobile windscreen wipers, was being carried out at the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge, England. When a smooth spherical slider of soft rubber was placed in contact with flat glass or perspex, the compliance of the rubber enabled it to conform to any slight roughness of the two surfaces such that perfect contact was obtained. In these circumstances the surfaces were found to adhere: under load the contact area exceeded that predicted by the Hertz theory of elastic contact, a contact area of finite size was seen at zero load and a tensile force was required to pull the surfaces apart. In an attempt to model these observations the JKR theory (Johnson, Kendall and Roberts, 1971) was born. At the same time, working in Moscow on adhesion of particles in colloidal suspension, Derjaguin, Muller and Toporov had developed a different ("DMT") theory of the adhesion of elastic spheres (DMT, 1975). At first it was thought that these theories were incompatible, until Tabor suggested that each applied to opposite ends of the spectrum of a non-dimensional parameter which expressed the ratio of the magnitude of the elastic deformation to the range of surface forces. This work was followed by Maugis and Barquins in the CNRS Laboratory at Belle Vue, who recognised the analogy between adhesion and fracture.

Sommario

1 Elements of Surface Physics.- 2 Elements of Elasticity.- 3 Rupture and Adherence of Elastic Solids.- 4 Frictionless Elastic Contact.- 5 Study of Some Geometries.- Appendix A.- References.- Appendix B.

Dettagli sul prodotto

Autori D. Maugis
Editore Springer, Berlin
 
Lingue Inglese
Formato Copertina rigida
Pubblicazione 02.04.2001
 
EAN 9783540661139
ISBN 978-3-540-66113-9
Pagine 414
Peso 746 g
Illustrazioni XIV, 414 p.
Serie Springer Series in Solid-State Sciences
Springer Series in Solid-State Sciences
Categoria Scienze naturali, medicina, informatica, tecnica > Fisica, astronomia > Termodinamica

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