Maghami, AliAliMaghamiTricarico, MicheleMicheleTricaricoCiavarella, MicheleMicheleCiavarellaPapangelo, AntonioAntonioPapangelo2024-02-292024-02-292024-03-08Engineering Fracture Mechanics 298: 109898 (2024)https://hdl.handle.net/11420/46101The problem of the detachment of a flat indenter from a plane adhesive viscoelastic strip of thickness “b” is studied. For any given retraction speed, three different detachment regimes are found: (i) for very small “b” the detachment stress is constant and equal to the theoretical strength of the interface, (ii) for intermediate values of “b” the detachment stress decays approximately as b−1/2, (iii) for thick layers a constant detachment stress is obtained corresponding to case the punch is detaching from a halfplane. By using the boundary element method a comprehensive numerical study is performed which assumes a linear viscoelastic material with a single relaxation time and a Lennard-Jones force-separation law. Pull-off stress is found to consistently and monotonically increase with unloading rate, but to be almost insensitive to the history of the contact. Due to viscoelasticity, unloading at high enough retraction velocity may allow punches of macroscopic size to reach the theoretical strength of the interface. Finally, a corrective term in Greenwood or Persson theories considering finite size effects is proposed with good agreement between theoretical and numerical results.en0013-7944Engineering fracture mechanics2024Elsevier ScienceCrack propagationDetachment forceThin layerViscoelasticityEngineering and Applied OperationsViscoelastic amplification of the pull-off stress in the detachment of a rigid flat punch from an adhesive soft viscoelastic layerJournal Article10.1016/j.engfracmech.2024.109898Journal Article