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Dive into the research topics where Dirk Dietzel is active.

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Featured researches published by Dirk Dietzel.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Frictional duality observed during nanoparticle sliding.

Dirk Dietzel; Claudia Ritter; Tristan Mönninghoff; Harald Fuchs; André Schirmeisen; Udo D. Schwarz

One of the most fundamental questions in tribology concerns the area dependence of friction at the nanoscale. Here, experiments are presented where the frictional resistance of nanoparticles is measured by pushing them with the tip of an atomic force microscope. We find two coexisting frictional states: While some particles show finite friction increasing linearly with the interface areas of up to 310 000 nm(2), other particles assume a state of frictionless sliding. The results further suggest a link between the degree of surface contamination and the occurrence of this duality.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2007

Interfacial friction obtained by lateral manipulation of nanoparticles using atomic force microscopy techniques

Dirk Dietzel; Tristan Mönninghoff; Lars Jansen; Harald Fuchs; Claudia Ritter; Udo D. Schwarz; André Schirmeisen

Nanometer scale metallic particles have been manipulated on an atomically flat graphite surface by atomic force microscopy techniques and quantitative information on interfacial friction was extracted from the lateral manipulation of these nanoparticles. Similar to conventional friction force microscopy, the particle-surface interfacial friction was extracted from the torsional signal of the cantilever during the particle pushing process. As a model system, we chose antimony particles with diameters between 50 and 500nm grown on a highly oriented pyrolytic graphite substrate. Three different manipulation strategies have been developed, which either enable the defined manipulation of individual nanoparticles or can be utilized to gather data on a larger number of particles found within a particular scan area, allowing for fast and statistically significant data collection. While the manipulation strategies are demonstrated here for operation under vacuum conditions, extensive testing indicated that the pro...


Applied Physics Letters | 2009

Transition from static to kinetic friction of metallic nanoparticles

Dirk Dietzel; Michael Feldmann; Harald Fuchs; Udo D. Schwarz; André Schirmeisen

Nanometer scale metallic islands were manipulated on a graphite surface by placing the tip of an atomic force microscope on top of the particles. Above a certain lateral force threshold particle sliding is observed, which allows us to quantify the transition from static to kinetic friction. This transition shows hysteretic character in the force domain and is characterized by a constant ratio of kinetic versus static friction of one half.


Nanotechnology | 2011

Understanding frictional duality and bi-duality: Sb-nanoparticles on HOPG

Ján Brndiar; Robert Turanský; Dirk Dietzel; André Schirmeisen; Ivan Stich

Antimony nanoparticles deposited under UHV conditions on HOPG are found to exhibit an intriguing frictional behavior characterized by a distinct clearly separated double dual behavior of dependence of the frictional force on contact area. We present the first realistic simulations, density functional modeling adapted to accommodate van der Waals interactions, of the (double) dual frictional behavior. The simulations provide insights into the physics/chemistry of all the frictional branches in terms of incommensurable interfaces, mobile spacer molecules as well as a novel concept of mobile oxidized multi-nanoasperities.


ACS Nano | 2017

Limitations of Structural Superlubricity: Chemical Bonds versus Contact Size

Dirk Dietzel; Ján Brndiar; Ivan Stich; André Schirmeisen

Structural superlubricity describes the state of virtually frictionless sliding if two atomically flat interfaces are incommensurate, that is, they share no common periodicity. Despite the exciting prospects of this low friction phenomenon, there are physical limitations to the existence of this state. Theory predicts that the contact size is one fundamental limit, where the critical size threshold mainly depends on the interplay between lateral contact compliance and interface interaction energies. Here we provide experimental evidence for this size threshold by measuring the sliding friction force of differently sized antimony particles on MoS2. We find that superlubric sliding with the characteristic linear decrease of shear stress with contact size prevails for small particles with contact areas below 15 000 nm2. Larger particles, however, show a transition toward constant shear stress behavior. In contrast, Sb particles on graphite show superlubricity over the whole size range. Ab initio simulations reveal that the chemical interaction energies for Sb/MoS2 are much stronger than for Sb/HOPG and can therefore explain the different friction properties as well as the critical size thresholds. These limitations must be considered when designing low friction contacts based on structural superlubricity concepts.


Ultramicroscopy | 2012

Tuning the instability in static mode atomic force spectroscopy as obtained in an AFM by applying an electric field between the tip and the substrate.

Soma Biswas; A. K. Raychaudhuri; P.A. Sreeram; Dirk Dietzel

We have investigated experimentally the role of cantilever instabilities in determination of the static mode force-distance curves in presence of a dc electric field. The electric field has been applied between the tip and the sample in an atomic force microscope working in ultra-high vacuum. We have shown how an electric field modifies the observed force (or cantilever deflection)-vs-distance curves, commonly referred to as the static mode force spectroscopy curves, taken using an atomic force microscope. The electric field induced instabilities shift the jump-into-contact and jump-off-contact points and also the deflection at these instability points. We explained the experimental results using a model of the tip-sample interaction and quantitatively established a relation between the observed static mode force spectroscopy curves and the applied electric field which modifies the effective tip-sample interaction in a controlled manner. The investigation establishes a way to quantitatively evaluate the electrostatic force in an atomic force microscope using the static mode force spectroscopy curves.


New Journal of Physics | 2018

Friction anomalies at first-order transition spinodals: 1T-TaS2

Emanuele Panizon; Torben Marx; Dirk Dietzel; Franco Pellegrini; Giuseppe E. Santoro; André Schirmeisen; Erio Tosatti

Revealing phase transitions of solids through mechanical anomalies in the friction of nanotips sliding on their surfaces is an unconventional and instructive tool for continuous transitions, unexplored for first-order ones. Owing to slow nucleation, first-order structural transformations generally do not occur at the precise crossing of free energies, but hysteretically, near the spinodal temperatures where, below and above the thermodynamic transition temperature, one or the other metastable free energy branches terminates. The spinodal transformation, a collective one-shot event with no heat capacity anomaly, is easy to trigger by a weak external perturbations. Here we propose that even the gossamer mechanical action of an AFM tip may locally act as a surface trigger, narrowly preempting the spontaneous spinodal transformation, and making it observable as a nanofrictional anomaly. Confirming this expectation, the CCDW-NCCDW first-order transition of the important layer compound 1T-TaS


Nanotechnology | 2018

Friction fluctuations of gold nanoparticles in the superlubric regime

Dirk Dietzel; Astrid S. de Wijn; Matthias Vorholzer; André Schirmeisen

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Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology | 2018

Recent highlights in nanoscale and mesoscale friction

Andrea Vanossi; Dirk Dietzel; André Schirmeisen; Ernst Meyer; Rémy Pawlak; Thilo Glatzel; Marcin Kisiel; Shigeki Kawai; Nicola Manini

is shown to provide a demonstration of this effect.


Langmuir | 2017

Nanotribological Properties of Hexadecanethiol Self-Assembled Monolayers on Au(111): Structure, Temperature, and Velocity

Torben Marx; Ximeng Shen; Dirk Dietzel; André Schirmeisen

Superlubricity, or alternatively termed structural (super)lubrictiy, is a concept where ultra-low friction is expected at the interface between sliding surfaces if these surfaces are incommensurate and thus unable to interlock. In this work, we now report on sudden, reversible, friction changes that have been observed during AFM-based nanomanipulation experiments of gold nanoparticles sliding on highly oriented pyrolythic graphite. These effects can be explained by rotations of the gold nanoparticles within the concept of structural superlubricity, where the occurrence of ultra-low friction can depend extremely sensitively on the relative orientation between the slider and the substrate. From our theoretical simulations it will become apparent how even miniscule magnitudes of rotation are compatible to the observed effects and how size and shape of the particles can influence the dependence between friction and relative orientation.

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Harald Fuchs

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Tristan Mönninghoff

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Ivan Stich

Slovak Academy of Sciences

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Ján Brndiar

Slovak Academy of Sciences

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Bert Stegemann

HTW Berlin - University of Applied Sciences

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A. K. Raychaudhuri

S.N. Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences

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