Published January 11, 2023
| Version v1
Journal article
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Topographic de-adhesion in the viscoelastic limit
- 1. University of Chicago
- 2. Universidad de Santiago de Chile
- 3. University of Pittsburgh
Description
The superiority of many natural surfaces at resisting soft, sticky biofoulants have inspired the integration of dynamic topography with mechanical instability to promote self-cleaning artificial surfaces. The physics behind this novel mechanism is currently limited to elastic biofoulants where surface energy, bending stiffness and topographical wavelength are key factors. However, the viscoelastic nature of many biofoulants causes a complex interplay between these factors with time-dependent characteristics such as material softening and loading rate. Here, we enrich the current elastic theory of topographic de-adhesion using analytical and finite-element models to elucidate the nonlinear, time-dependent interaction of three physical, dimensionless parameters: biofoulant's stiffness reduction, the product of relaxation time and loading rate, and the critical strain for short-term elastic de-adhesion. Theoretical predictions, in good agreement with numerical simulations, provide insight into tuning these control parameters to optimize surface renewal via topographic de-adhesion in the viscoelastic regime.
Data availability
Data for this study can be found in the main manuscript and the electronic supplementary material files and video.Files
Topographic-de-adhesion-in-the-viscoelastic-limit.pdf
Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1098/rsif.2022.0598
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:5377
Funding
- Fondecyt
- 1201250
- National Science Foundation
- CMMI
- National Institutes of Health
- 1R01HL159205-01