lubricated contact
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Lever ◽  
Emily Asenath-Smith ◽  
Susan Taylor ◽  
Austin Lines

Sliding friction on ice and snow is characteristically low at temperatures common on Earth’s surface. This slipperiness underlies efficient sleds, winter sports, and the need for specialized tires. Friction can also play micro-mechanical role affecting ice compressive and crushing strengths. Researchers have proposed several mechanisms thought to govern ice and snow friction, but directly validating the underlying mechanics has been difficult. This may be changing, as instruments capable of micro-scale measurements and imaging are now being brought to bear on friction studies. Nevertheless, given the broad regimes of practical interest (interaction length, temperature, speed, pressure, slider properties, etc.), it may be unrealistic to expect that a single mechanism accounts for why ice and snow are slippery. Because bulk ice, and the ice grains that constitute snow, are solids near their melting point at terrestrial temperatures, most research has focused on whether a lubricating water film forms at the interface with a slider. However, ice is extremely brittle, and dry-contact abrasion and wear at the front of sliders could prevent or delay a transition to lubricated contact. Also, water is a poor lubricant, and lubricating films thick enough to separate surface asperities may not form for many systems of interest. This article aims to assess our knowledge of the mechanics underlying ice and snow friction.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Lever ◽  
Susan Taylor ◽  
Garrett Hoch ◽  
Charles Daghlian

The long-accepted theory to explain why snow is slippery postulates self-lubrication: frictional heat from sliding melts and thereby lubricates the contacting snow grains. We recently published micro-scale interface observations that contradicted this explanation: contacting snow grains abraded and did not melt under a polyethylene slider, despite low friction values. Here we provide additional observational and theoretical evidence that abrasion can govern snow kinetic friction. We obtained coordinated infrared, visible-light and scanning-electron micrographs that confirm that the evolving shapes observed during our tribometer tests are contacting snow grains polished by abrasion, and that the wear particles can sinter together and fill the adjacent pore spaces. Furthermore, dry-contact abrasive wear reasonably predicts the evolution of snow-slider contact area and sliding-heat-source theory confirms that contact temperatures would not reach 0°C during our tribometer tests. Importantly, published measurements of interface temperatures also indicate that melting did not occur during field tests on sleds and skis. Although prevailing theory anticipates a transition from dry to lubricated contact along a slider, we suggest that dry-contact abrasion and heat flow can prevent this transition from occurring for snow-friction scenarios of practical interest.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 168781402110394
Author(s):  
Yang Zhao ◽  
Yang Xiao ◽  
Hao Sun ◽  
Wenhao Huo ◽  
Chuan Wu ◽  
...  

A new two-dimensional finite element model of a lubricated contact pair, based on a contour integral, is proposed to investigate the formation of micro-pitting on gear tooth surfaces. Meanwhile, the contact properties and elasto-hydrodynamic lubrication (EHL) conditions of the gears are considered in the lubricated contact pair model. Then, the stress intensity factors (SIFs) KI and KII and the propagation angle θ C at the crack tip are analyzed by ABAQUS software. Next, the equivalent SIF Kσ can be calculated according to the maximum tangential stress (MTS) criterion, which is often used as the criterion for crack propagation. Considering the effect of a moving contact, the crack more easily propagates under the load x0/ b = −0.895. Furthermore, the pit shapes and variation of stress intensity factor are determined for various combinations of initial crack length a0 and angle β. The results show that longer germinated cracks propagate in areas that are deeper below the tooth surface. And the total length of final crack increases with the initial length and germination angle. These research results provide theoretical support for contact fatigue life analysis and meshing stiffness calculations of micro-pitting gears.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
James H. Lever ◽  
Emily Asenath-Smith ◽  
Susan Taylor ◽  
Austin P. Lines

Sliding friction on ice and snow is characteristically low at temperatures common on Earth’s surface. This slipperiness underlies efficient sleds, winter sports, and the need for specialized tires. Friction can also play a micro-mechanical role affecting ice compressive and crushing strengths. Researchers have proposed several mechanisms thought to govern ice and snow friction, but directly validating the underlying mechanics has been difficult. This may be changing, as instruments capable of micro-scale measurements and imaging are now being brought to bear on friction studies. Nevertheless, given the broad regimes of practical interest (interaction length, temperature, speed, pressure, slider properties, etc.), it may be unrealistic to expect that a single mechanism accounts for why ice and snow are slippery. Because bulk ice, and the ice grains that constitute snow, are solids near their melting point at terrestrial temperatures, most research has focused on whether a lubricating water film forms at the interface with a slider. However, ice is extremely brittle, and dry-contact abrasion and wear at the front of sliders could prevent or delay a transition to lubricated contact. Also, water is a poor lubricant, and lubricating films thick enough to separate surface asperities may not form for many systems of interest. This article aims to assess our knowledge of the mechanics underlying ice and snow friction. We begin with a brief summary of the mechanical behavior of ice and snow substrates, behavior which perhaps has not received sufficient attention in friction studies. We then assess the strengths and weaknesses of five ice- and snow-friction hypotheses: pressure-melting, self-lubrication, quasi-liquid layers, abrasion, and ice-rich slurries. We discuss their assumptions and review evidence to determine whether they are consistent with the postulated mechanics. Lastly, we identify key issues that warrant additional research to resolve the specific mechanics and the transitions between them that control ice and snow friction across regimes of practical interest.


Lubricants ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 31
Author(s):  
Hiba Jendoubi ◽  
Olga Smerdova ◽  
Noël Brunetière

Hydrophobic surfaces can allow a liquid to slip over the surface and can thus reduce friction in lubricated contact working in a full film regime. Theory supports that the amount of slip can be increased if super-hydrophobic surfaces that are composed of a textured low surface energy material are used. In this work, polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) polymer samples were textured with a femto second laser to create super-hydrophobic surfaces by machining a hexagonal network of small circular holes with 10 and 20 μm lattice sides. The frictional behavior of these surfaces was compared to the smooth PTFE samples. Surprisingly, the textured surfaces revealed higher friction coefficients than the smooth surfaces. This higher friction can be explained by a change of wetting regime due to high pressure in fluid and a possible generation of vortices in the cavities.


Soft Matter ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Le Goff ◽  
Tung B.T. To ◽  
Olivier Pierre-Louis

We model the nonlinear response of a lubricated contact composed of a two-dimensional lipid membrane immersed in a simple fluid between two parallel flat and porous walls under shear. The...


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