Cornuault Pierre-Henri, Carpentier Luc, Bueno Marie-Ange, Cote Jean-Marc, Monteil Guy
Département de Mécanique Appliquée, Institut FEMTO-ST, UMR CNRS 6174, UBFC, 24 rue de l'Epitaphe, 25000 Besançon, France.
Laboratoire de Physique et Mécanique Textiles, Université Haute-Alsace, Ecole Nationale Supérieure d'Ingénieurs Sud Alsace, 11 rue Alfred Werner, 68093 Mulhouse Cedex, France
J R Soc Interface. 2015 Sep 6;12(110):0495. doi: 10.1098/rsif.2015.0495.
This study investigates how the fingerpad hydrolipid film, shape, roughness and rigidity influence the friction when it rubs surfaces situated in the slippery psychophysical dimension. The studied counterparts comprised two 'real' (physical) surfaces and two 'virtual' surfaces. The latter were simulated with a tactile stimulator named STIMTAC. Thirteen women and 13 men rubbed their right forefingers against the different surfaces as their arms were displaced by a DC motor providing constant velocity and sliding distance. Tangential and normal forces were measured with a specific tribometer. The fingerpad hydrolipid film was characterized by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The shape and roughness of fingers were extrapolated from replicas. Indentation measurements were carried out to determine fingerpad effective elastic modulus. A clear difference was observed between women and men in terms of friction behaviour. The concept of tactile frictional contrast (TFC) which was introduced quantifies an individual's propensity to distinguish two surfaces frictionally. The lipids/water ratio and water amount on the finger skin significantly influenced the TFC. A correlation was observed between the TFC and fingerpad roughness, i.e. the height of the fingerpad ridges. This is essentially owing to gender differences. A significant difference between men's and women's finger topography was also noted, because our results suggested that men have rougher fingers than women. The friction measurements did not correlate with the fingerpad curvature nor with the epidermal ridges' spatial period.
本研究调查了指腹的水脂膜、形状、粗糙度和硬度在摩擦处于滑爽心理物理学维度的表面时如何影响摩擦力。所研究的配对物包括两个“真实”(物理)表面和两个“虚拟”表面。后者由一个名为STIMTAC的触觉刺激器模拟。13名女性和13名男性将其右手食指摩擦不同表面,同时其手臂由提供恒定速度和滑动距离的直流电机移动。用特定的摩擦计测量切向力和法向力。通过傅里叶变换红外光谱对指腹水脂膜进行表征。从复制品推断手指的形状和粗糙度。进行压痕测量以确定指腹有效弹性模量。在摩擦行为方面,观察到女性和男性之间存在明显差异。引入的触觉摩擦对比度(TFC)概念量化了个体通过摩擦区分两个表面的倾向。手指皮肤上的脂质/水比例和水量显著影响TFC。观察到TFC与指腹粗糙度(即指腹嵴的高度)之间存在相关性。这主要归因于性别差异。还注意到男性和女性手指地形之间存在显著差异,因为我们的结果表明男性的手指比女性更粗糙。摩擦力测量结果与指腹曲率以及表皮嵴的空间周期均无相关性。