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2 Estimation of the friction potential
On a smooth, even, dry road, the adhesion component has the main influence on the
friction force, see Figure 2.1 (left). It is caused by molecular bonds between the friction
partners and strongly depends on intermediary layers such as water or snow, [Bac98,
p.4]. The pressure distribution of rubber material sliding over irregularities caused by
the roughness of the road is symmetrical for low sliding speeds vS. With higher sliding
speeds, the relaxation of the rubber is not fast enough due to internal damping. Small
areas lift from the road surface, which results in an uneven pressure distribution, see
Figure 2.1, right. The component of the internal friction forceFF projected to the plane
of motion, which is called the hysteresis component (see example of element dFhn in
Figure2.1), superposes the friction force in thecontact surface. Inadditiontothesliding
speed, it also depends on the geometry of the road and the visco-elastic properties of the
rubber. Unlike adhesion, this component is insensitive to the presence of intermediary
layers, [Bac96, p.22]. The last two components only occur under certain circumstances.
Viscosity components, which are only relevant when thick intermediary liquid layers are
present, occur due to shear effects. Cohesion forces appear in cases of abrasion and tire
wear. The surface of the rubber material increases, leading to friction loss, [Bac96, p.4].
2.1.2. Friction potential of the rotating tire
Friction-based force transmission requires a relative motion, or the tendency to motion,
between the friction partners. In the case of tire road friction, the relevant relative
motion is the sliding velocity vS in the contact patch. In the longitudinal direction, it
is given byω ·re−vW,xwith the effective tire radius re, the wheel’s rotational speedω
and the longitudinal velocity component vW,x in the contact patch. One frequently used
value of the longitudinal sliding speed is described by the longitudinal slip sx and reads
sx=
ω·re−vW,x
|vW,x| vW,x>re ·ω
ω·re−vW,x
|ω|·re vW,x<re ·ω
0 vW,x= re ·ω. (2.3)
In the lateral direction, the relevant sliding velocity is given by the lateral slip angle
α= arctan (
vW,y
vW,x )
(2.4)
which also includes the lateral component vW,y of the velocity in the contact patch.
Figure 2.2 shows a graphical explanation of re,ω, vW,x and vW,y and the velocity vC in
the wheel centreC.
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Maximum Tire-Road Friction Coefficient Estimation
- Titel
- Maximum Tire-Road Friction Coefficient Estimation
- Autor
- Cornelia Lex
- Verlag
- Verlag der Technischen Universität Graz
- Ort
- Graz
- Datum
- 2015
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-85125-423-5
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 189
- Kategorie
- Technik