| Literature DB >> 33586756 |
Edvin Memet1, Feodor Hilitski2, Zvonimir Dogic3, L Mahadevan4.
Abstract
Adhesive interactions between elastic structures such as graphene sheets, carbon nanotubes, and microtubules have been shown to exhibit hysteresis due to irrecoverable energy loss associated with bond breakage, even in static (rate-independent) experiments. To understand this phenomenon, we start with a minimal theory for the peeling of a thin sheet from a substrate, coupling the local event of bond breaking to the nonlocal elastic relaxation of the sheet and show that this can drive static adhesion hysteresis over a bonding/debonding cycle. Using this model we quantify hysteresis in terms of the adhesion and elasticity parameters of the system. This allows us to derive a scaling relation that preserves hysteresis at different levels of granularity while resolving a seeming paradox of lattice trapping in the continuum limit of a discrete fracture process. Finally, to verify our theory, we use new experiments to demonstrate and measure adhesion hysteresis in bundled microtubules.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33586756 DOI: 10.1039/d0sm02192j
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soft Matter ISSN: 1744-683X Impact factor: 3.679