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Toward Understanding Low Surface Friction on Quasiperiodic Surfaces
(Englisch)
An Investigation of the Tribological Properties of Quasicrystals and Quasiperiodic Surfaces
Keith McLaughlin

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Autor/Autorin: McLaughlin Keith

Keith McLaughlin is a graduate student in Applied Physics and Chemistry at the University of South Florida in Tampa, FL. His research interests include molecular dynamics, computational chemistry and mathematical crystallography. Keith received his M.S. in Physics in 2009, and possesses undergraduate degrees in physics and mathematics.
In a 2005 article in Science, Park et al. measured in vacuum the friction between a coated atomic-force- microscope tip and the clean two-fold surface of an AlNiCo quasicrystal. Because the two-fold surface is periodic in one direction and aperiodic (with a quasiperiodicity related to the Fibonacci sequence) in the perpendicular direction, frictional anisotropy is not unexpected; however, the magnitude of that anisotropy in the Park experiment, a factor of eight, is unprecedented. By eliminating chemistry as a variable, the experiment also demonstrated that the low friction of quasicrystals must be tied in some way to their quasiperiodicity. Through various models, we investigate generic geometric mechanisms that might give rise to this anisotropy.
In a 2005 article in Science, Park et al. measured in vacuum the friction between a coated atomic-force- microscope tip and the clean two-fold surface of an AlNiCo quasicrystal. Because the two-fold surface is periodic in one direction and aperiodic (with a quasiperiodicity related to the Fibonacci sequence) in the perpendicular direction, frictional anisotropy is not unexpected; however, the magnitude of that anisotropy in the Park experiment, a factor of eight, is unprecedented. By eliminating chemistry as a variable, the experiment also demonstrated that the low friction of quasicrystals must be tied in some way to their quasiperiodicity. Through various models, we investigate generic geometric mechanisms that might give rise to this anisotropy.
Keith McLaughlin is a graduate student in Applied Physics and Chemistry at the University of South Florida in Tampa, FL. His research interests include molecular dynamics, computational chemistry and mathematical crystallography. Keith received his M.S. in Physics in 2009, and possesses undergraduate degrees in physics and mathematics.

Über den Autor

Keith McLaughlin is a graduate student in Applied Physics and Chemistry at the University of South Florida in Tampa, FL. His research interests include molecular dynamics, computational chemistry and mathematical crystallography. Keith received his M.S. in Physics in 2009, and possesses undergraduate degrees in physics and mathematics.


Klappentext

In a 2005 article in Science, Park et al. measured in vacuum the friction between a coated atomic-force- microscope tip and the clean two-fold surface of an AlNiCo quasicrystal. Because the two-fold surface is periodic in one direction and aperiodic (with a quasiperiodicity related to the Fibonacci sequence) in the perpendicular direction, frictional anisotropy is not unexpected; however, the magnitude of that anisotropy in the Park experiment, a factor of eight, is unprecedented. By eliminating chemistry as a variable, the experiment also demonstrated that the low friction of quasicrystals must be tied in some way to their quasiperiodicity. Through various models, we investigate generic geometric mechanisms that might give rise to this anisotropy.



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