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What makes tires grip the road on a rainy day?
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What Makes Tires Grip the Road On a Rainy Day?

ScienceDaily (Oct. 19, 2011) — A team of scientists from Italy and Germany has recently developed a model to predict the friction occurring when a rough surface in wet conditions (such as a road on a rainy day) is in sliding contact with a rubber material (such as a car tire tread block) in an article to be published shortly in the Springer journal EPJE.

In their study, B.N.J. Persson from the Jülich Research Center in Germany and M. Scaraggi from the Polytechnic of Bari in Italy examined the flow of liquid at the contact between randomly rough surfaces. The contact interface looks like a labyrinth with vertically narrow void channels intersecting randomly. This causes channels to be either filled with water or not when in wet conditions.

For the first time, the authors applied a statistical analytical method to determine the average fluid flow at the interface of rough surfaces. Understanding this flow is important because it is inherently linked to the phenomenon of friction at the contact between the two surfaces.

Previous attempts to understand friction in such conditions used numerical approaches that required large computing power. They were based on calculating real roughness contacts by singling out each individual portion of the overall rough surface under study. Often, heavy approximations in the description of the simulated surface were applied to decrease the computational time.

The model presented in this paper provides theoretical predictions of friction as a function of the surface sliding velocity. It confirms previous experimental friction measurements made with a smooth steel ball sliding on a rough rubbery surface patterned with parallel grooves. The authors' model confirmed the experimental observation of a changing friction level related to a change in the angle between the direction of movement of the ball and the parallel to the grooves.

Potential applications would require that such a model be used to help create surfaces, such as microstructured tyres, which do not lower their grip when it rains.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Springer Science+Business Media, via AlphaGalileo.

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Journal Reference:

  1. B. N. J. Persson, M. Scaraggi. Lubricated sliding dynamics: Flow factors and Stribeck curve. The European Physical Journal E, 2011; 34 (10) DOI: 10.1140/epje/i2011-11113-9
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Quicklinks:
- How Studded Winter Tires May Damage Public Health, as Well as Pavement- 200907090721122846- Tires Made From Trees: Better, Cheaper, More Fuel Efficient- read more- 02110201101734- Clean Streets and Intact Road Surfaces Help to Keep the Air Clean- read more- 200708070828210646- Halting High-Speed Pursuits- read more- Archaeologists Discover Unique Gold Earring- Cloak of Invisibility Using Plasmonics- Earth's Water Cycle Intensifying- Toxic Mercury in Arctic Springs from Hidden Source- How Birds Learn Songs: Motor Control Insights- Pollution-Intensified Storms Warm Atmosphere- Coffee Drinkers Have Lower Risk of Death- Newfound Exoplanet May Turn to Dust- read more- 200907090721122846- Tires Made From Trees: Better, Cheaper, More Fuel Efficient- read more- 02110201101734- Clean Streets and Intact Road Surfaces Help to Keep the Air Clean- read more- 200708070828210646- Halting High-Speed Pursuits- read more- Archaeologists Discover Unique Gold Earring- Cloak of Invisibility Using Plasmonics- Earth's Water Cycle Intensifying- Toxic Mercury in Arctic Springs from Hidden Source- How Birds Learn Songs: Motor Control Insights- Pollution-Intensified Storms Warm Atmosphere- Coffee Drinkers Have Lower Risk of Death- Newfound Exoplanet May Turn to Dust