Abstract
Reducing friction has been a human pursuit for centuries, and is especially important for the development of nanotechnology. Nowadays, with the atomic-level understanding of friction, it is possible to reduce friction by modulating the configuration and motion of interfacial atoms. However, how to further reduce friction by modulating the interfacial electronic properties is still unclear. Here we show a strategy to achieve friction and wear reduction through inducing dynamic electronic density redistribution via alternating electric current. The friction force between conductive Ir AFM tip and graphene on Ni substrate can be reduced to 1/4 under 1 kHz alternating current, and maintain for more than 70,000 s under 9.1 GPa contact pressure without any obvious wear. An electronic-level friction model (PTT-E model) is presented to unravel and quantify the tuning effect, showing that the alternating current induced dynamic electron density redistribution is the key to friction reduction. This work proposes a feasible and robust method to reduce friction and wear in nanomechanical devices, and advances the understanding and predicting of electronic contribution in friction tuning.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 4704 |
Journal | Nature Communications |
Volume | 16 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Dec 2025 |
Externally published | Yes |