Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMercy Lewis Modified over 9 years ago
1
Shawn Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. Assistant Professor Faculty of Engineering and Applied Science Memorial University of Newfoundland spkenny@engr.mun.ca ENGI 1313 Mechanics I Lecture 36:Friction
2
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 2 Chapter 8 Objectives to introduce the concept of dry friction to analyze the equilibrium of rigid bodies subjected to dry friction force to present specific applications of dry friction force analysis on wedges
3
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 3 Lecture 36 Objective to introduce the concept of dry friction to analyze the equilibrium of rigid bodies subjected to dry friction force
4
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 4 Friction – What is it? Resistance force Sliding, rolling, twisting Tangent to normal contact surface between two bodies Acts in a direction opposite to relative motion or tendency for motion
5
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 5 Types of Friction Fluid Friction Contact surface separated by fluid Fluid may be a liquid or gas Fluid mechanics
6
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 6 Types of Friction Dry Friction Coulomb friction Non-lubricated contact surface
7
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 7 Dry Friction Classical Model Mechanical Surface roughness Other Factors More complex process Scale dependent Macro nano scale Parameters with varying importance e.g. compare friction between two ‘rough’ sheet metal and two polished sheet metal surfaces e.g. compare friction between two rough glass and two smooth glass (microscope plates) surfaces
8
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 8 Dry Friction – Classical Model Mechanical Surface roughness Frictional component, F Normal Force, N
9
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 9 Dry Friction – Classical Model (cont.) Distributed Contact Forces Normal Tangential (Frictional) Resultant Forces
10
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 10 Normal Force, N N F NN F
11
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 11 Static Friction Force, F s Equilibrium (P < F s ) s coefficient of static friction Why is F s N?
12
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 12 Static Friction Force, F s (cont.) Impending Motion (P = F s = s N) Impending Motion Applied Force Friction Force FsFs P = F s No Motion
13
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 13 Friction Force Assumptions Proportional to normal force Independent of the contact area Independent of velocity Valid for a Wide Range of Practical Conditions
14
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 14 Friction Force (cont.) Can Breakdown Contact conditions Variable friction coefficient e.g. Tires in snow or mud
15
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 15 Motion (P > F k = k N) Block is in motion Constant velocity Kinetic friction coefficient ~25% less than static F k < F s Complex phenomenon k coefficient of kinetic friction where k < s Constant Velocity Static Friction Force, F k
16
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 16 Variation of Friction Force Three Phases Static friction Equilibrium Limiting static friction Maximum value Impending motion Kinetic friction Motion Impending Motion Applied Force Friction Force FsFs P = F s No Motion Kinetic Static
17
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 17 Variation of Friction Force (cont.) Three Characteristics Experimental measurements Range where static friction exceeds kinetic friction General decrease in friction force magnitude and coefficient General constant kinetic friction force Applied Force Friction Force FsFs P = F s No Motion Kinetic Static
18
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 18 Determination of Friction Coefficient Static: Angle to cause motion Kinetic: Angle to cause motion with constant velocity Exercise: Sum forces on axes parallel and perpendicular to plane
19
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 19 Impending Motion / Tipping? How to Determine? Number of Unknowns? F s, N, P, and x
20
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 20 Impending Motion / Tipping? (cont.) Assume Impending Motion Slipping What is Known or Assumed? What is to be Solved? P, N, x Check?
21
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 21 Impending Motion / Tipping? (cont.) Assume Tipping What is Known? What is to be Solved? P, N, F Check?
22
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 22 Comprehension Quiz 21-01 A 10 N block is in equilibrium. What is the magnitude of the friction force between this block and the surface? A) 0 N B) 1 N C) 2 N D) 3 N Answer: C
23
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 23 Textbook Problems
24
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 24 Textbook Problems
25
ENGI 1313 Statics I – Lecture 36© 2007 S. Kenny, Ph.D., P.Eng. 25 References Hibbeler (2007) http://wps.prenhall.com/esm_hibbeler_eng mech_1
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.