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Abstract

This thesis comes within the scope of tribology studies at the nanometer scale. The experimental techniques used in this work are essentially related to atomic force microscopy, which gives a direct access to the topography and forces of the studied systems. Two principal aspects of the nanotribology have kept our attention. They are the nanofriction and the nanomechanics. These two domains divide the thesis in two main parts that remain however intimately bound. The first experimental part of the thesis describes the friction of a nanoscopic tip sliding on hydrophilic surfaces. The dependence of the friction force on the sliding velocity is studied for various applied normal loads and surrounding relative humidity levels. We found a logarithmic dependence of the friction force on both the scanning velocity and the relative humidity. For the first time, a transition from a positive to a negative slope of the friction force versus the logarithm of the sliding velocity has been observed for the very same tip-surface contact, by varying the relative humidity. The role of the relative humidity on the friction force has then been studied more deeply, leading to a two-thirds power law dependence of the capillary force on the normal load. Finally, analytical expressions for the friction phenomenon and the capillary condensation between the asperities of the tip and the surface have been developed to explain the phenomenological behaviors. The second experimental part describes themechanics of carbon nanotubes and tobacco mosaic viruses. In order to stay in the linear elasticity regime, small indentation amplitudes have been applied in the radial direction of multiwalled carbon nanotubes adsorbed on a silicon oxide surface. Using a theory based on the Hertz model, the radial stiffness has been evaluated and compared to molecular dynamics simulations. We found a radial Young modulus strongly decreasing with increasing radius and reaching an asymptotic value of 30 ± 10 GPa. The tobacco mosaic viruses have been adsorbed on a polyimide porous membrane. Evidence for the softness of the viruses has been obtained by imaging the tubes with the atomic force microscope in non-contact mode. Viruses hanging like ropes over the pores of the surface served as basis to measure their bending Young modulus. Using a model of a clamped beam loaded by a discrete gradient of van der Waals forces, we found a bending Young modulus of 3.1 ± 0.1 MPa.

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