Calculating time/force applied on two blocks using coefficient of friction

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the minimum time for two blocks to cover 5 meters without the top block slipping, given coefficients of static and kinetic friction. The maximum force applied to the top block is determined to be 23.5N, while the frictional force opposing the lower block is 13.7N. The net force acting on the lower block is calculated to be 9.8N, leading to an acceleration of approximately 1.4 m/s². Participants emphasize the importance of using free body diagrams to visualize forces and clarify misunderstandings about static versus kinetic friction. The conversation highlights the critical role of friction in determining the motion of the blocks.
mesa
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Homework Statement



The coefficient of static friction between two blocks is .60. The coefficient of kinetic friction between the lower block and the floor is .20. If a horizonatal force is applied to the upper block (m=4kg) what is the minimum amount of time the two blocks (m=7kg) can cover 5 meters without the top block slipping?

The Attempt at a Solution



First I calculated the maximum force that could be applied to the top block:
.60*g*4kg = 23.5N
Then I figured the force of friction between the floor and both blocks:
.20*g*7kg = 13.7N

Since the force of friction between the floor and lower block opposes the maximum force applied to the top block I subtracted the two giving 9.8N, using this I divided by the total mass of 7kg giving an acceleration of appx 1.4m/s^2. From here solved for t = √(2d/a) = 2.67 s which is incorrect :)
 
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mesa said:

Homework Statement



The coefficient of static friction between two blocks is .60. The coefficient of kinetic friction between the lower block and the floor is .20. If a horizonatal force is applied to the upper block (m=4kg) what is the minimum amount of time the two blocks (m=7kg) can cover 5 meters without the top block slipping?

The Attempt at a Solution



First I calculated the maximum force that could be applied to the top block:
.60*g*4kg = 23.5N
Then I figured the force of friction between the floor and both blocks:
.20*g*7kg = 13.7N

Since the force of friction between the floor and lower block opposes the maximum force applied to the top block I subtracted the two giving 9.8N, using this I divided by the total mass of 7kg ...

I believe you were calculating the resultant force on the lower block. As such, you should divide the force by the mass of the lower block to get the acceleration.
 
Sourabh N said:
I believe you were calculating the resultant force on the lower block. As such, you should divide the force by the mass of the lower block to get the acceleration.

Yup, that works but I am having a hard time seeing it, what am I missing here?
 
A free body diagram. :biggrin:

EDIT: Another way to look at it: For lower block, the static friction from upper block and kinetic friction from ground, are the agents of motion.
 
Last edited:
Sourabh N said:
A free body diagram. :biggrin:

Another way to look at it: The static friction on the upper block takes care of its motion.

LOL, okay I am going to draw this sucker out again, I think I see what you are saying :)
 
Shoot I am still not getting this one, what if the two blocks were glued together and we pulled on the top block with the same 23.5N force would the answer still be the same?
 
mesa said:
Shoot I am still not getting this one, what if the two blocks were glued together and we pulled on the top block with the same 23.5N force would the answer still be the same?

Yes!

You would be wondering what difference does friction make, then?
If you apply a force larger than 23.5N, the boxes with static friction would start moving separately, since static friction can't keep them together anymore. Those bound by a glue, on the other had, stay together forever.
 
Sourabh N said:
Yes!

You would be wondering what difference does friction make, then?
If you apply a force larger than 23.5N, the boxes with static friction would start moving separately, since static friction can't keep them together anymore. Those bound by a glue, on the other had, stay together forever.

I am sure I am missing something simple here, okay if the problem were exactly the same and the two blocks were glued together and we put a 23.5N force on the set and they had a kinetic coefficient of friction of .20 with a total mass of 7kg then wouldn't that break down like this:

23.5N = 7kg*a so a=3.35m/s^2, however there is still kinetic friction to account for between the floor and the blocks opposing this motion so:

fk= 7kg*g*.20 = 13.73N
F-fk = 9.8N so acceleration would be 1.4m/s^2

I'm screwing something up but am having a hard time seeing it :P
How does the static friction cancel out vs glue? That's basically the difference right?
feeling a little more stoopid than usual today :/
 
mesa said:
I am sure I am missing something simple here, okay if the problem were exactly the same and the two blocks were glued together and we put a 23.5N force on the set and they had a kinetic coefficient of friction of .20 with a total mass of 7kg then wouldn't that break down like this:

23.5N = 7kg*a so a=3.35m/s^2, however there is still kinetic friction to account for between the floor and the blocks opposing this motion so:

fk= 7kg*g*.20 = 13.73N
F-fk = 9.8N so acceleration would be 1.4m/s^2

I'm screwing something up but am having a hard time seeing it :P
How does the static friction cancel out vs glue? That's basically the difference right?
feeling a little more stoopid than usual today :/

Okay I see one of the things going wrong there (infact you had the same thing in your original question, I couldn't catch it). As I said: FREE BODY DIAGRAM! :wink:

Look at my FBD for the two scenarios: http://i.imgur.com/yav8u.png

The external force (F ext in the figure) is NOT equal to the static frictional force (F st fr). If that were the case, the system wouldn't move at all!
 
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