How does ultrasonic oscillation reduce sliding friction?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the phenomenon of ultrasonic oscillation and its effect on reducing sliding friction, particularly in the context of ultrasonic cutting techniques applied to food, such as apple slicing. Participants explore the underlying physics, including the implications of static versus dynamic friction and the role of oscillation modes in cutting efficiency.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant notes that the friction coefficient can be simplified to μ ≅ 2/π (ζ), where ζ is the ratio of moving velocity to vibrational velocity, suggesting that lower ratios lead to lower friction coefficients.
  • Another participant raises the distinction between static and dynamic friction, indicating that rapid vibrations may prevent the friction from entering the static range, which is typically higher than dynamic friction.
  • A participant describes their personal experience using a similar technique to move heavy objects, implying that vibrations can facilitate movement by altering the frictional dynamics.
  • One participant references a manufacturer's explanation that high-frequency vibrations create a "cocoon effect" around the blade, potentially reducing sticking by disrupting surrounding air molecules.
  • Another participant outlines different modes of oscillation (vertical, longitudinal, and sideways) and their respective effects on friction and cutting quality, suggesting that vertical oscillation may help maintain a clean cutting edge.
  • A later reply discusses how longitudinal movement combined with vibration can reduce the effective friction opposing the knife's motion, highlighting the role of material inertia in this context.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views on the mechanisms at play, with some agreeing on the role of dynamic friction and oscillation while others propose different interpretations of the effects of ultrasonic vibrations. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the primary mechanisms and effects involved.

Contextual Notes

Participants mention various factors that could influence the outcomes, such as entrained air, vaporizing lubricants, and changes in lubricant viscosity due to pressure and temperature, but these aspects are not fully explored or quantified.

foodstarch87
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Hi everyone!

Sorry if I'm not able to work through this problem very much myself... I'm a Food Science student, and I'm trying to read an article about ultrasonic cutting when applied to apple slicing. From the papers they reference, the rapid vibrations on the blade reduce the friction coefficient significantly, but I can't understand why that is the case.

In the end, the friction coefficient is simplified down to μ ≅ 2/π (ζ)
where ζ = (moving velcocity) / (vibrational velocity)

The lower the ratio of the blade velocity to the vibrational velocity, the lower the frictional coefficient. I can't really follow the actual derivation very well, since I've only dealt with friction at the most basic level (like mostly up to F = μN...).

Any help with deconstructing the steps in the article would be highly appreciated! I'll try my best to follow and work through it too! Mostly looking for a basic explanation for what's going on. It just doesn't make intuitive sense to me.

Thanks!
 

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Um, Static friction vs Dynamic friction ??

FWIW, I used related technique to move our massive steel lab-benches. Took 'Three Large Guys' or just skinny me. Trick was to use the bench frame's slight flexibility. I'd pull a bench, then kick the nearest leg to start it. The bench would wriggle, its legs became pendulums, and I'd 'walk' it along the aisle without further ado...
 
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Sorry if this is a dumb question. Are you suggesting that when it vibrates so fast, it is more of a dynamic friction coefficient in the instantaneous moment? The blade is always moving downward when cutting, but the oscillation seems to somehow affect the friction coefficient. Not super well versed in this haha
 
foodstarch87 said:
Are you suggesting that when it vibrates so fast, it is more of a dynamic friction coefficient in the instantaneous moment?

I can't speak for @Nik_2213 , but yes, the vibrations do not let the friction go into the static range, which with very few exceptions is higher than the dynamic friction.

It is much harder in most cases to start two surfaces moving against each rather than keeping them moving.

There are other things in play at speed: entrained air/gas, possibly vaporizing lube, lubricant viscosity changes due to pressure/temp, surface heating...others...

I believe though, you are looking at a well documented special case static versus dynamic friction experiment.
 
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Hi everyone,

I was digging around more and saw this explanation on the data sheet of the ultrasonic blade manufacturer. It said that "Because the horn (the blade) is vibrating at such a high frequency, it disrupts the air molecules around it causing a cocoon effect. This cocoon effect virtually eliminates product sticking". Does this sound plausible? How would I describe that as a physics phenomenon?
 

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The mode of oscillation will determine the principle being employed to cut.

1. Simple vertical oscillation, is chopping. It replaces static friction with dynamic friction, may introduce a cocoon of air.

2. Oscillation along the length of the blade, is slicing. It will convert static to dynamic friction, but introduces less air.

3. Sideways oscillation, opening the kerf and introducing air. It will be messy.

The slots in the cutter look to me like they are there to encourage the vertical oscillation mode
The cutting quality may be because the knife remains clean which reduces sticking.
 
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It may or may not be the primary effect, but pulling or pushing a knife longitudinally as it advances into a cut has a useful result. The frictional force of the material on the flat of the knife has a more or less fixed magnitude. That friction acts opposite to the direction of relative motion. If the knife is moving primarily longitudinally, this dynamic friction acts primarily longitudinally. The component of friction that then acts to oppose the knife advancing into the cut is reduced.

Vibration has an advantage over long strokes because it eliminates the need to support the material against the longitudinal force of friction. The material's own inertia does the job.

A vertical vibration into and out of the cut would have much the same effect. The time average of the momentarily upward and momentarily downward forces of friction can average out to something pretty small, even though the net movement averages downward.
 
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