Friction between two rotating cylinders

AI Thread Summary
To determine the coefficient of friction between two rotating cylinders, the relationship can be expressed as the applied torque divided by the normal force. The torque on each cylinder can be related to the radius of the cylinders, leading to the equations T1*r1/F and T2*r2/F, where T is torque, r is radius, and F is the applied force. The discussion emphasizes that the coefficient of friction is unitless, and careful attention must be paid to the dimensions involved in the calculations. The approach suggested involves treating the problem similarly to linear equations by substituting force with torque and speed with rotational speed. This method provides a systematic way to derive the coefficient of friction for the materials in contact.
Scooter057
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I have two hollow cylinders of different sizes. The smaller cylinder is inside the larger cylinder but NOT concentrically. The OD of the smaller cylinder contacts the ID of the larger cylinder at the 6 o'clock position. Both cylinders rotate but in opposite directions. An actuator pushes the larger cylinder upwards applying a normal force to the smaller cylinder. I know the torque being applied to each cylinder, the constant rotational speeds of each cylinder and the force being applied to the actuator. I also know the weights of everything. How would i find the coefficient of friction of the two materials that are rubbing together?
 
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Maybe I'm under-thinking this but couldn't you work it like a linear problem and just change each term to be rotational? Force --> torque. speed (v) --> rotation speed (w).

(friction force) = (friction coefficient) * (normal force)

Speed is constant, so:
(friction force) = (applied torque)

Substitute that into the original equation:
(applied torque) = (friction coefficient) * (normal force)
(friction coefficient) = (applied torque) / (normal force)

You already know the torque on the small cylinder, and the normal force is just the net force acting upward on the small cylinder.

Please tell me how it goes :smile:
 
Last edited:
Scooter057 said:
I have two hollow cylinders of different sizes. The smaller cylinder is inside the larger cylinder but NOT concentrically. The OD of the smaller cylinder contacts the ID of the larger cylinder at the 6 o'clock position. Both cylinders rotate but in opposite directions. An actuator pushes the larger cylinder upwards applying a normal force to the smaller cylinder. I know the torque being applied to each cylinder, the constant rotational speeds of each cylinder and the force being applied to the actuator. I also know the weights of everything. How would i find the coefficient of friction of the two materials that are rubbing together?
Is this a real life problem that you are trying to solve, or is it from a textbook/course?
 
I work for a company that produced drill pipe. One of the engineers designed a machine that simulates the drill pipe wearing against the side of the hole. This particular machine uses two cylinders in contact rotating in opposite directions to measure the amount of wear to the surface of the drill pipe. I'm pretty new to the company and have been tasked with determining a formula for the coefficient of friction regardless of the two materials being worn. I have an idea about how to proceed I just want to get other opinions.
 
ShawnD said:
Maybe I'm under-thinking this but couldn't you work it like a linear problem and just change each term to be rotational? Force --> torque. speed (v) --> rotation speed (w).

(friction force) = (friction coefficient) * (normal force)

Speed is constant, so:
(friction force) = (applied torque)

Substitute that into the original equation:
(applied torque) = (friction coefficient) * (normal force)
(friction coefficient) = (applied torque) / (normal force)

You already know the torque on the small cylinder, and the normal force is just the net force acting upward on the small cylinder.

Please tell me how it goes :smile:


The coefficient of friction is a unitless number. Dividing a torque by a force gives you a distance. (Nm/N = m)
 
Scooter057 said:
The coefficient of friction is a unitless number. Dividing a torque by a force gives you a distance. (Nm/N = m)

If that's the case, we need to know either the inside diameter of the big pipe or the outside diameter of the small pipe.
 
If the radius of the big cylinder is r1 and the small cylinder r2, then I would think that the coefficient could be expressed as T1*r1/F where T1 is the torque on the big cylinder and F is the applied force. It would also be expressed as T2*r2/F. Does that sound right?
 
Yes. You are right. Your formulas are the good ones (I found the same).
 
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