Dag, S.Çıracı, Salim2016-02-082016-02-0820041098-0121http://hdl.handle.net/11693/24165Strong attractive interaction between two clean diamond (001) slabs turns repulsive upon the hydrogenation of surfaces. This repulsive interaction serves as if a boundary lubricant and prevents the sliding surfaces from being closer to each other even under high normal forces. As a result, calculated lateral force variation generated during sliding has small magnitude under high constant loading forces. Superlow friction observed earlier between diamondlike carbon-coated surfaces can be understood by the steady repulsive interaction between sliding surfaces, as well as strong and stiff carbon-carbon and carbon-hydrogen bonds which do not favor energy dissipation. In ambient conditions, the steady repulsive interaction is, however, destroyed by oxygen atoms which chemically modify those stiff surface bonds.EnglishDiamondArticleAtomFrictionHydrogen bondHydrogenationMathematical analysisMolecular interactionAtomic scale study of superlow friction between hydrogenated diamond surfacesArticle10.1103/PhysRevB.70.241401