Contact mechanics is the study of the deformation of solids that touch each other at one or more points.[1] [2] This can be divided into compressive and adhesive forces in the direction perpendicular to the interface, and frictional forces in the tangential direction. Frictional contact mechanics is the study of the deformation of bodies in the presence of frictional effects, whereas frictionless contact mechanics assumes the absence of such effects.
Frictional contact mechanics is concerned with a large range of different scales.
This page is mainly concerned with the second scale: getting basic insight in the stresses and deformations in and near the contact patch, without paying too much attention to the detailed mechanisms by which they come about.
Several famous scientists, engineers and mathematicians contributed to our understanding of friction.[3] They include Leonardo da Vinci, Guillaume Amontons, John Theophilus Desaguliers, Leonhard Euler, and Charles-Augustin de Coulomb. Later, Nikolai Pavlovich Petrov, Osborne Reynolds and Richard Stribeck supplemented this understanding with theories of lubrication.
Deformation of solid materials was investigated in the 17th and 18th centuries by Robert Hooke, Joseph Louis Lagrange, and in the 19th and 20th centuries by d’Alembert and Timoshenko. With respect to contact mechanics the classical contribution by Heinrich Hertz[4] stands out. Further the fundamental solutions by Boussinesq and Cerruti are of primary importance for the investigation of frictional contact problems in the (linearly) elastic regime.
Classical results for a true frictional contact problem concern the papers by F.W. Carter (1926) and H. Fromm (1927). They independently presented the creep versus creep force relation for a cylinder on a plane or for two cylinders in steady rolling contact using Coulomb’s dry friction law (see below).[5] These are applied to railway locomotive traction, and for understanding the hunting oscillation of railway vehicles. With respect to sliding, the classical solutions are due to C. Cattaneo (1938) and R.D. Mindlin (1949), who considered the tangential shifting of a sphere on a plane (see below).[1]
In the 1950s, interest in the rolling contact of railway wheels grew. In 1958, Kenneth L. Johnson presented an approximate approach for the 3D frictional problem with Hertzian geometry, with either lateral or spin creepage. Among others he found that spin creepage, which is symmetric about the center of the contact patch, leads to a net lateral force in rolling conditions. This is due to the fore-aft differences in the distribution of tractions in the contact patch.
In 1967, Joost Jacques Kalker published his milestone PhD thesis on the linear theory for rolling contact.[6] This theory is exact for the situation of an infinite friction coefficient in which case the slip area vanishes, and is approximative for non-vanishing creepages. It does assume Coulomb's friction law, which more or less requires (scrupulously) clean surfaces. This theory is for massive bodies such as the railway wheel-rail contact. With respect to road-tire interaction, an important contribution concerns the so-called magic tire formula by Hans Pacejka.[7]
In the 1970s, many numerical models were devised. Particularly variational approaches, such as those relying on Duvaut and Lion’s existence and uniqueness theories. Over time, these grew into finite element approaches for contact problems with general material models and geometries, and into half-space based approaches for so-called smooth-edged contact problems for linearly elastic materials. Models of the first category were presented by Laursen[8] and by Wriggers.[9] An example of the latter category is Kalker’s CONTACT model.[10]
A drawback of the well-founded variational approaches is their large computation times. Therefore, many different approximate approaches were devised as well. Several well-known approximate theories for the rolling contact problem are Kalker’s FASTSIM approach, the Shen-Hedrick-Elkins formula, and Polach’s approach.
More information on the history of the wheel/rail contact problem is provided in Knothe's paper.[5] Further Johnson collected in his book a tremendous amount of information on contact mechanics and related subjects.[1] With respect to rolling contact mechanics an overview of various theories is presented by Kalker as well.[10] Finally the proceedings of a CISM course are of interest, which provide an introduction to more advanced aspects of rolling contact theory.[11]
Central in the analysis of frictional contact problems is the understanding that the stresses at the surface of each body are spatially varying. Consequently, the strains and deformations of the bodies are varying with position too. And the motion of particles of the contacting bodies can be different at different locations: in part of the contact patch particles of the opposing bodies may adhere (stick) to each other, whereas in other parts of the contact patch relative movement occurs. This local relative sliding is called micro-slip.
This subdivision of the contact area into stick (adhesion) and slip areas manifests itself a.o. in fretting wear. Note that wear occurs only where power is dissipated, which requires stress and local relative displacement (slip) between the two surfaces.
The size and shape of the contact patch itself and of its adhesion and slip areas are generally unknown in advance. If these were known, then the elastic fields in the two bodies could be solved independently from each other and the problem would not be a contact problem anymore.
Three different components can be distinguished in a contact problem.
The last aspect is the primary concern of contact mechanics. It is described in terms of so-called contact conditions.For the direction perpendicular to the interface, the normal contact problem, adhesion effects are usually small (at larger spatial scales) and the following conditions are typically employed:
en
en>0
pn
pn>0
en\ge0,pn\ge0,en ⋅ pn=0
en,pn
In the tangential directions the following conditions are often used:
\vec{p}=(px,
T | |
p | |
y) |
z
g
\|\vec{p}\|<g
\vec{s}=(sx,
T | |
s | |
y) |
=\vec{0}
\vec{p}=-g\vec{s}/\|\vec{s}\|
The precise form of the traction bound is the so-called local friction law. For this Coulomb's (global) friction law is often applied locally:
\|\vec{p}\|\leg=\mupn
\mu
\mu
T
\|\vec{s}\|
Consider a rope where equal forces (e.g.,
Fhold=400N
T
T=400N
180\circ
Fload=600N
The tension distribution in the rope in this final situation is described by the capstan equation, with solution:
\begin{align} T(\phi)&=Thold,&\phi&\in\left[\phihold,\phiintf\right]\\ T(\phi)&=Tloade-\mu\phi,&\phi&\in\left[\phiintf,\phiload\right]\\ \phiintf&=
1 | log\left( | |
\mu |
Tload | |
Thold |
\right)& \end{align}
The tension increases from
Thold
\phi=\phihold
Tload
\phi=\phiload
\phi=\phiintf
\phiintf
T
\phi
The tension
T
\phi\in[\phiintf,\phiload]
600N
400N
400
600N
If a rope is laying in equilibrium under tangential forces on a rough orthotropic surface then three following conditions (all of them) are satisfied:
This generalization has been obtained by Konyukhov A.,[12] [13]
Consider a sphere that is pressed onto a plane (half space) and then shifted over the plane's surface. If the sphere and plane are idealised as rigid bodies, then contact would occur in just a single point, and the sphere would not move until the tangential force that is applied reaches the maximum friction force. Then it starts sliding over the surface until the applied force is reduced again.
In reality, with elastic effects taken into consideration, the situation is much different. If an elastic sphere is pressed onto an elastic plane of the same material then both bodies deform, a circular contact area comes into being, and a (Hertzian) normal pressure distribution arises. The center of the sphere is moved down by a distance
\deltan
R
E,\nu
\begin{align} pn(x,y)&=p0\sqrt{1-
r2 | |
a2 |
Now consider that a tangential force
Fx
\muFn
\deltax
This contact problem was solved approximately by Cattaneo using an analytical approach. The stress distribution in the equilibrium state consists of two parts:
\begin{align} px(x,y)&=\mup0\left(\sqrt{1-
r2 | |
a2 |
In the central, sticking region
0\ler\lec
ux=\deltax/2
ux=-\deltax/2
\deltax
c\ler\lea
sx(x,y)=\deltax+
sphere(x, | |
u | |
x |
y)-
plane(x, | |
u | |
x |
y)
This shift
sx(x,y)
So, during the tangential loading of the sphere, partial sliding occurs. The contact area is thus divided into a slip area where the surfaces move relative to each other and a stick area where they do not. In the equilibrium state no more sliding is going on.
The solution of a contact problem consists of the state at the interface (where the contact is, division of the contact area into stick and slip zones, and the normal and shear stress distributions) plus the elastic field in the bodies' interiors. This solution depends on the history of the contact. This can be seen by extension of the Cattaneo problem described above.
This demonstrates that the state in the contact interface is not only dependent on the relative positions of the two bodies, but also on their motion history. Another example of this occurs if the sphere is shifted back to its original position. Initially there was no tangential stress in the contact interface. After the initial shift micro-slip has occurred. This micro-slip is not entirely undone by shifting back. So in the final situation tangential stresses remain in the interface, in what looks like an identical configuration as the original one.
Influence of friction on dynamic contacts (impacts) is considered in detail in. [14]
Rolling contact problems are dynamic problems in which the contacting bodies are continuously moving with respect to each other. A difference to dynamic sliding contact problems is that there is more variety in the state of different surface particles. Whereas the contact patch in a sliding problem continuously consists of more or less the same particles, in a rolling contact problem particles enter and leave the contact patch incessantly. Moreover, in a sliding problem the surface particles in the contact patch are all subjected to more or less the same tangential shift everywhere, whereas in a rolling problem the surface particles are stressed in rather different ways. They are free of stress when entering the contact patch, then stick to a particle of the opposing surface, are strained by the overall motion difference between the two bodies, until the local traction bound is exceeded and local slip sets in. This process is in different stages for different parts of the contact area.
If the overall motion of the bodies is constant, then an overall steady state may be attained. Here the state of each surface particle is varying in time, but the overall distribution can be constant. This is formalised by using a coordinate system that is moving along with the contact patch.
Consider a cylinder that is rolling over a plane (half-space) under steady conditions, with a time-independent longitudinal creepage
\xi
If the cylinder and plane consist of the same materials then the normal contact problem is unaffected by the shear stress. The contact area is a strip
x\in[-a,a]
\begin{align} pn(x)&=
p0 | |
a |
\sqrt{a2-x2}&|x|&\lea&a2&=
4FnR | |
\piE* |
\\ p0&=
2Fn | |
\pia |
&&& E*&=
E | |
2\left(1-\nu2\right) |
& \end{align}
The distribution of the shear stress is described by the Carter-Fromm solution. It consists of an adhesion area at the leading edge of the contact area and a slip area at the trailing edge. The length of the adhesion area is denoted
2a'
x'=x+a-a'
Fx>0
\xi<0
\begin{align} px(x)&=0& |&x|\gea\\ px(x)&=
\mup0 | |
a |
\left(\sqrt{a2-x2}-\sqrt{a'2-x'2}\right)& a-2a'\le{}&x\lea\\ px(x)&=\mupn(x)&&x\lea-2a' \end{align}
The size of the adhesion area depends on the creepage, the wheel radius and the friction coefficient.
\begin{align} a'&=a\sqrt{1-
|Fx| | |
\muFn |
For larger creepages
a'=0
When considering contact problems at the intermediate spatial scales, the small-scale material inhomogeneities and surface roughness are ignored. The bodies are considered as consisting of smooth surfaces and homogeneous materials. A continuum approach is taken where the stresses, strains and displacements are described by (piecewise) continuous functions.
The half-space approach is an elegant solution strategy for so-called "smooth-edged" or "concentrated" contact problems.
1/distance2
1/distance
(x,y,z)T\in\R3
z>0
Using the fundamental solution for the half-space, the full 3D contact problem is reduced to a 2D problem for the bodies' bounding surfaces.
A further simplification occurs if the two bodies are “geometrically and elastically alike”. In general, stress inside a body in one direction induces displacements in perpendicular directions too. Consequently, there is an interaction between the normal stress and tangential displacements in the contact problem, and an interaction between the tangential stress and normal displacements. But if the normal stress in the contact interface induces the same tangential displacements in both contacting bodies, then there is no relative tangential displacement of the two surfaces. In that case, the normal and tangential contact problems are decoupled. If this is the case then the two bodies are called quasi-identical. This happens for instance if the bodies are mirror-symmetric with respect to the contact plane and have the same elastic constants.
Classical solutions based on the half-space approach are:
py