Finger pad friction and its role in grip and touch

Michael Adams, S. A. Johnson, P. Lefevre, V. Levesque, V. Hayward, T. Andre, J.-l. Thonnard

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

148 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Many aspects of both grip function and tactile perception depend on complex frictional interactions occurring in the contact zone of the finger pad, which is the subject of the current review. While it is well established that friction plays a crucial role in grip function, its exact contribution for discriminatory touch involving the sliding of a finger pad is more elusive. For texture discrimination, it is clear that vibrotaction plays an important role in the discriminatory mechanisms. Among other factors, friction impacts the nature of the vibrations generated by the relative movement of the fingertip skin against a probed object. Friction also has a major influence on the perceived tactile pleasantness of a surface. The contact mechanics of a finger pad is governed by the fingerprint ridges and the sweat that is exuded from pores located on these ridges. Counterintuitively, the coefficient of friction can increase by an order of magnitude in a period of tens of seconds when in contact with an impermeably smooth surface, such as glass. In contrast, the value will decrease for a porous surface, such as paper. The increase in friction is attributed to an occlusion mechanism and can be described by first-order kinetics. Surprisingly, the sensitivity of the coefficient of friction to the normal load and sliding velocity is comparatively of second order, yet these dependencies provide the main basis of theoretical models which, to-date, largely ignore the time evolution of the frictional dynamics. One well-known effect on taction is the possibility of inducing stick–slip if the friction decreases with increasing sliding velocity. Moreover, the initial slip of a finger pad occurs by the propagation of an annulus of failure from the perimeter of the contact zone and this phenomenon could be important in tactile perception and grip function.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)20120467-20120467
JournalJournal of The Royal Society Interface
Volume10
Issue number80
Early online date19 Dec 2012
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 6 Mar 2013

Keywords

  • contact area
  • contact mechanics
  • human skin
  • occlusion
  • stick–slip
  • tribology

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