Abstract

A finite element model is used to simulate sliding inception of a rigid flat on a deformable sphere under combined normal and tangential loading. Sliding inception is treated as the loss of tangential contact stiffness under combined effects of plasticity, crack propagation and interfacial slip. Energy dissipation distribution is used to quantify the relative contribution of these mechanisms on the increased compliance during tangential loading. Materials with different strength and toughness properties, and varying local interface conditions ranging from fully adhered to finite friction, are studied to relate variations in plastic deformations, crack and slip to the sliding inception. For fully adhered contact condition, crack and fracture toughness have no effect on sliding inception, with plasticity, the dominant failure mechanism. A measure of recoverable strain (yield strength to Young’s modulus ratio) is found to be the most influential parameter in sliding inception. Interfacial slip is expectedly the dominant mechanism for sliding inception for lower coefficient of friction, modeling lubricated contacts. Interplay of plasticity and interfacial slip is found to govern the onset of sliding for higher local friction coefficients. Furthermore, the single asperity results are incorporated in a statistical model for nominally flat contacting rough surfaces under combined normal and tangential loading to investigate the stochastic effects due to surface roughness and material property uncertainties. The results show that the static coefficient of friction strongly depends on the normal load, material properties, local interfacial strength and roughness parameters.

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