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Microscale investigation on interfacial slippage and detachment of ice from soft materials

Authors :
Kartik Regulagadda
Julia Gerber
Thomas M. Schutzius
Dimos Poulikakos
Source :
Materials Horizons, 9 (4)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Surface icing is detrimental to applications ranging from transportation to biological systems. Soft elastomeric coatings can engender remarkably low ice adhesion strength, but mechanisms at the microscale and resulting ice extraction outcomes need to be understood. Here we investigate dynamic ice-elastomer interfacial events and show that the ice adhesion strength can actually vary by orders of magnitude due to the shear velocity. We study the detailed deformation fields of the elastomer using confocal traction force microscopy and elucidate the underlying mechanism. The elastomer initially undergoes elastic deformation having a shear velocity dependent threshold, followed by partial relaxation at the onset of slip, where velocity dependent "stick-slip" micropulsations are observed. The results of the work provide important information for the design of soft surfaces with respect to removal of ice, and utility to fields exemplified by adhesion, contact mechanics, and biofouling.<br />Materials Horizons, 9 (4)<br />ISSN:2051-6347<br />ISSN:2051-6355

Details

ISSN :
20516355 and 20516347
Volume :
9
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Materials horizons
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f2337ccc48cd507c02d04a7c7b3dd5bb