Abstract
Friction measurements by an atomic force microscope (AFM) frequently showed regular stick-slip friction signals with atomic-scale resolutions. Typically, for an AFM metal tip sliding on a metal crystal surface, the microstructure of the tip made from the thermally evaporated metal coating on a silicon cantilever was polycrystalline. Our detailed molecular dynamics(MD) simulations of a polycrystalline Pt tip (R = 10 nm in radius) sliding on an Au(111) surface revealed how the geometry of the polycrystalline tip took effect on the friction behavior at the contact interface. We found that the apex of the Pt tip with multiple grains near the edge of contact could induce severe plastic deformations of the gold substrate, leading to irregular stick-slip frictions upon sliding. Simulation results showed that in order to achieve a clear stick-slip friction signal with single atomic slips, the apex of the Pt tip must adopt a single crystalline protrusion without any neighboring grains involved in the metal contact. We showed that such a single crystalline protrusion, which presumably could be achieved during initial run-in or wear-out of high-energy Pt atoms in the neighboring grains, was passivated by a large number of gold atoms due to metal adhesion in the contact periphery. Using such a crystalline protrusion tip, we demonstrated that the stick-slip friction produced was very "tolerant" to the adhesion of a large number of gold atoms on the tip apex. We further showed that AFM tip mass used in MD simulations also played an important role in determining the transition between friction regimes, which could be well explained by the Prandtl-Tomlinson thermal activation model.
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