Journal of Adhesion, Vol.79, No.8-9, 749-776, 2003
Contact between a smooth microsphere and an anisotropic rough surface
This article discusses the effects of asperities on elastic and adhesive contact between a smooth sphere and a rough surface. Two numerical methods are introduced: an asperity-superposition method and a direct-simulation method. In the first method, geometric parameters such as asperity heights, orientations, and radii of curvature are identified by a least-squares regression of neighboring surface heights measured using an atomic force microscope. The rough surface is reconstructed by the superposition of these asperities. The modeling of adhesive and elastic contacts begins with the modeling of a single parabolic-shaped asperity contact. A generalized JKR model for an arbitrary parabola is developed to suit this purpose. The contact between the rough surface (represented by the supposition of parabolic-shaped asperities) and the sphere consequently is modeled bythe mapping and integration of individual asperity contacts. In the second method, pure-elastic contact is modeled by half-space elastic theory. A contact-search algorithm is used to find solutions on the displacement and the contact-pressure distribution that satisfy both the load-displacement equation and the contactboundary conditions. Results from both methods are compared to reveal the effects of asperities on adhesion and elastic-contact pressure.