A Novel Optical Micro Apparatus for Adhesion and Friction Force Measurements

Abdullah A. Alazemi

Mechanical Engineering, College of Engineering & Petroleum, Kuwait University, Kuwait

Abstract
An optical micro apparatus was designed and developed to visualize and measure adhesion and friction forces for a steel ball in contact with a sapphire window.  The apparatus allows for in situ optical investigation of the contact interface during the initiation, separation and simultaneous measurement of the normal force generated within the contact.  A high precision z-stage was utilized to move the steel ball at low velocities (0.1 μm/s) to bring it into contact with the fixed sapphire window.  In this study, the adhesion force between a 1-mm diameter steel ball and sapphire window was measured and visualized when the surfaces approach and retract from each other.  The experimental results demonstrated the presence of the adhesion force and stick area during the retraction of the contacting surfaces.  The optical micro apparatus is also equipped with a piezoelectric actuator to reciprocate the ball against the sapphire window to conduct sliding friction experiments at various normal loads.  In this investigation, a new optical technique was also developed to measure the tangential displacement of the contacting interfaces during sliding friction tests.  The friction loops obtained using the measured tangential displacement exhibited a rectangular shape thus eliminating the system stiffness commonly observed in friction loop studies.  The vertical and horizontal segments of the rectangular friction loops characterize the stick and slip regions of the contact, respectively.

 

Biography

Abdullah Alazemi is an Assistant Professor in Mechanical Engineering department at Kuwait University. He joined the Mechanical Engineering Tribology Laboratory at Purdue University in January 2013. He earned his Doctor of Philosophy in August 2017. His research interests include numerical and experimental investigation of friction at the microscale, stick-slip friction, lubricant additives, and contact mechanics.