百家乐怎么玩-澳门百家乐官网娱乐城网址_网上百家乐是不是真的_全讯网888 (中国)·官方网站

CityUHK researchers simulate nanoscale superlubricity behaviour of 2D water/ice on graphene sheet

Cathy Choi

 

Professor Zeng (middle) and his team.
Professor Zeng (middle) and his team.

 

Researchers from City University of Hong Kong (CityUHK) and Peking University have successfully achieved the direct measurement and simulation of the nanoscale superlubricity behaviour of a 2D water/ice on graphene sheet.

The joint research revealed for the first time the nearly vanishing static friction behaviour between a 2D bilayer water/ice and a graphene sheet. This finding represents a major advancement in nanofluidic engineering and nanotribology, prompting calls for potential applications in nano-filtration and reduced tribological consumption.

The research, titled "Probing structural superlubricity of two-dimensional water transport with atomic resolution", was recently published in the scientific journal Science.

A 2D water/ice on graphene (left) and lowstatic friction coefficient (right).
A 2D water/ice on graphene (left) and lowstatic friction coefficient (right).

 

Nanofluidic engineering and nanotribology are crucial disciplines in nanoscience and nanotechnology, and superlubricity conventionally refers to a nearly-ideal frictionless state between two sliding solid surfaces with a kinetic friction coefficient being less than 0.01.

A computational research group led by Professor Zeng Xiaocheng, Head and Chair Professor in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at CityUHK, carried out comprehensive molecular dynamics (MD) simulations on the laterally sliding behaviour of the 2D water/ice on a graphene monolayer.

A cartoon illustrating the superlubricity of 2D water/ice on graphene.
A cartoon illustrating the superlubricity of 2D water/ice on graphene.

 

The CityUHK researchers focused on the static friction behaviour and computed the maximum static friction force and static friction coefficient of the 2D ice/graphene systems. To mimic realistic experimental systems, the MD simulations were designed with the size of 2D ice ranging from a few nms to hundreds of nms, comparable to those grown in the experiment conducted by Peking University.

They found that the area-normalised static friction is inversely related to the contact area of the bilayer ice. Such a relationship can be described by a power of ~-0.5, confirming the experimental measurement. More interestingly, the static friction coefficient can even approach 0.01 for relatively large size 2D ice island. These findings indicate that superlubricity behaviour on static friction between the 2D bilayer ice and graphene is consistent with the experimentally discovered trend of static friction force by the Peking University team.

Professor Zeng said that this joint experimental/computational work is of fundamental significance, not only because it offers atomic-level understanding the origin of the water transport under nanoscale confinements but also because it moves the frontier of nanofluidic engineering and nanotribology research by revealing superlubricity behaviour in static friction between a soft-solid and a hard-solid.

“Additionally, this work will inspire future exploration of new superlubric, nanofluidic systems and energy-saving tribological systems for practical applications,” said Professor Zeng.

 

YOU MAY BE INTERESTED

Contact Information

Communications and Institutional Research Office

Back to top
百家乐赌场导航| 澳门百家乐娱乐场开户注册| 百家乐官网筹码多少钱| 百家乐在线娱乐网| 网上玩百家乐官网好吗| 肯博百家乐的玩法技巧和规则| 百家乐官网平的概率| 百家乐视频游戏盗号| 百家乐官网有破解的吗| 發中發百家乐的玩法技巧和规则| 网络百家乐官网骗局| 棋牌新教室| 澳门百家乐官网765118118| 皇冠网开户| 张家港百家乐赌博| 百家乐官网入庄闲概率| 太子娱乐城开户| 运城百家乐的玩法技巧和规则 | 百家乐官网画哪个路单| 鸿胜国际| 大发888娱乐注册| 闲和庄百家乐娱乐场| 大发888的示例| 百家乐压钱技巧| 百家乐官网打鱼秘籍| 百家乐官网玩法有技巧| 360棋牌大厅| 网上百家乐真钱游戏| 足球百家乐投注计算| 百家乐官网平玩法可以吗| 皇廷国际| 大发888娱乐场zb8| 缅甸百家乐玩假吗| 视频百家乐官网破解| 婺源县| 易胜博娱乐| 大发888bet游戏平台| scc太阳城俱乐部| 2016哪个属相做生意吉利| 百家乐官网特殊计| E世博百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则|