Friction/water depth relationship—In situ observations and its integration in tire/road friction models

The purpose of this paper is to provide new experimental evidences about the friction/water depth relationship and to improve the formulation of friction models in terms of consideration of the effect of water depth. Tests are conducted on test tracks. Friction forces are measured by means of a dedicated trailer providing a locked-wheel (full sliding) friction coefficient. The test surfaces are wetted by an on-board wetting system providing water depths varying from 0.1 mm to 1.50 mm. Effect of the road surface texture on the friction/water depth variation is shown and commented. Inputs newly provided by field tests, compared with laboratory tests, are highlighted. The obtained friction/water depths curves are assimilated to Stribeck curves and analyses, assuming conditions of a starved lubricated contact, are conducted to determine the lubrication regimes experienced by the tire/road contact when the road surface changes from dry to wet. A new friction model is formulated using the three-zone description of the tire/road contact area. The formulation is focused on the water drainage term reflected by a so-called hydrodynamic term FHL. It was assumed that FHL is a product of elementary functions expressing the respective effects of water depth, speed, tire tread depth, and road surface macrotexture on water drainage. Form of the elementary functions is derived from experimental evidences and consideration of previous friction models. Fitting of the new model to experimental data is shown and comparison with previous models is discussed.

[1]  Ag Veith Tires – Roads – Rainfall – Vehicles: The Traction Connection , 1983 .

[2]  B. Persson Theory of rubber friction and contact mechanics , 2001 .

[3]  Irinel Cosmin Faraon,et al.  Mixed lubricated line contacts , 2005 .

[4]  Desmond F. Moore,et al.  The Friction of Pneumatic Tyres , 1975 .

[5]  A. R. Savkoor Paper VIII (iii) Tribology of Tyre Traction on Dry and Wet Roads , 1991 .

[6]  M Gothie Skid resistance measurements on French pavements and their interpretation , 2005 .

[7]  J J Henry,et al.  PREDICTION OF SKID RESISTANCE AS A FUNCTION OF SPEED FROM PAVEMENT TEXTURE MEASUREMENTS , 1978 .

[8]  Barbara E. Sabey,et al.  Factors Affecting the Friction of Tires on Wet Roads , 1970 .

[9]  Dirk J. Schipper Transitions in the lubrication of concentrated contacts: practical implications , 1992 .

[10]  Wb Horne,et al.  A Method for Rating the Skid Resistance and Micro/Macrotexture Characteristics of Wet Pavements , 1983 .

[11]  J. M. Golden,et al.  A theory of wet road-tyre friction , 1981 .

[12]  W. O. Yandell,et al.  MICROTEXTURE ROUGHNESS EFFECT ON PREDICTED ROAD-TYRE FRICTION IN WET CONDITIONS , 1981 .

[13]  Minh Tan Do,et al.  Tribology approach to predict the variation of tire-wet road friction with slip speed , 2004 .

[14]  Desmond F. Moore,et al.  A theory of viscous hydroplaning , 1967 .

[15]  F La Torre,et al.  FRICTION VARIATION DUE TO SPEED AND WATER DEPTH , 2000 .

[16]  Véronique Cerezo,et al.  Modeling of the connection road surface microtexture/water depth/friction , 2013 .

[17]  Bt Kulakowski,et al.  Effect of Water-Film Thickness on Tire-Pavement Friction , 1990 .