ICTP is pleased to announce that the forthcoming ICTP Colloquium
      by Prof. Bo Persson on "The Physics of Contact and Adhesion with
      application to biological systems" will take place TODAY at
          17:00 hrs, in the Budinich Lecture Hall, Leonardo
      Building, ICTP.
    
     
        Biosketch: Prof. Bo Persson obtained his PhD in theoretical
      physics from Chalmers Technical University 1980. His thesis
      advisor was Prof. Stig Lundqvist, one of the founders of condensed
      matter at ICTP. He is currently working at the Peter Gruenberg
      Institute of the Research Center Juelich, part of Germany’s
      Helmholtz Association. Besides several years as a visiting
      scientist at IBM research laboratories, in Yorktown Heights and in
      Zurich, he spent numerous periods as a visiting scientist in
      research laboratories in Israel, Japan, China, Italy, and
      elsewhere. After his initial research work in dynamical processes
      at surfaces, he turned around 1995 to theoretical tribology
      (friction, adhesion, contact mechanics). He has published more
      that 400 articles in international journals, and is the author of
      "Sliding Friction: Physical Principles and Applications"
      (Springer, first edition 1997) and co-author (with Prof. A.
      Volokitin) on "Electromagnetic Fluctuations at the Nanoscale:
      Theory and Applications" (Springer, 2017), besides the early book
      (with E. Tosatti) “Physics of Sliding Friction (Kluwer 1996)
      collecting papers of the very first ICTP Research Workshop on the
      subject in 1995. 
      Besides his primary research activity at PGI, Bo Persson is the
      founder and CEO of MultiscaleConsulting, a company involved in
      consulting (theory and experiment) on topics related to contact
      mechanics and friction (see 
www.MultiscaleConsulting.com). Most
      clients are from the tire industry, two F1-racing teams (rubber
      friction and tire dynamics), and medical companies (the contact
      between the rubber stopper and the barrel in syringes).
      
      
Abstract: One of the
        weakest forces in Nature is the van der Waals interaction which
        acts between all atoms and solids. Still on a macroscopic level
        this force field is very strong: one can theoretically hang an
        object with the weight of a car using a solid bar with 1 square
        cm cross section attached by the van der Waals interaction to a
        flat surface. This is never observed in reality, and in my
        presentation, I will explain the origin of this "adhesion
        paradox". I will also show how some animals, like the gecko or
        tree frog, have "learned" (via natural selection) to make use of
        these weak force fields to adhere to rough and contaminated
        surfaces, where traditional adhesives would fail. I will
        describe the origin of adhesion hysteresis, and present some
        experimental results illustrating it. All solid objects have
        surface roughness which often is fractal-like, sometimes
        extending from the size of the solid object to atomic distances.
        I will describe a theory which can be used to study the contact
        between two elastic solids with surface roughness and adhesion.
        The theory predicts the contact area and the stress probability
        distribution, as well as the probability distribution of
        interfacial separations, and is the basis for a huge number of
        practical applications like rubber friction, adhesion, the heat
        and electric contact resistance, leakage of rubber seals,
        conveyor belts, tire dynamics etc. It describes how the contact
        between two solid objects changes as the interface is studied
        with increasing magnification, say from the naked-eye level to
        atomic resolution. The theory will be illustrated with
        applications to the human skin, to electroadhesion for haptic
        touchscreens (involving the finger-glass screen contact), and
        adhesive pads for robotics.
        
 Information is available at: http://indico.ictp.it/event/9069/
        
        The Colloquium will be livestreamed at:  ictp.it/livestream 
          
          
          Light refreshments will be served after the talk.
          
          You are all very warmly invited to attend. 
          
          With best regards, 
          
          Office of the Director, ICTP