We have measured the growth of liquid films of Ar adsorbed on well defined arrays of microscopic linear wedges sculpted on thin Si wafers and on a stainless steel disk. On these patterns, a clear cross-over from a planarlike to a geometry dependent growth behavior is observed. This crossover is found to depend on the characteristic wedge size. Near liquid-vapor bulk coexistence, the film mass is observed to diverge as a power law of the chemical potential difference from saturation with an exponent in very good agreement with the value of -2 expected for a linear wedge. This exponent is not affected by the opening angles of the wedges. All these findings are in accordance with a recent scaling theory.
We have employed the quartz-crystal microbalance technique to measure the sliding friction of krypton films physisorbed on gold. By slowly increasing the amplitude of the substrate oscillations, we have observed a sharp transition from a film locked to the substrate to a sliding one. This transition is characterized by hysteresis both in dissipation and inertial mass as the amplitude is decreased. Finally, the dependence of this transition on film coverage has been studied in some detail.
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