Collision-induced friction in the motion of a particle on a bumpy inclined plane
S. Dippel, G. G. Batrouni, D. E. Wolf (HLRZ Juelich)

TL;DR
This study uses Molecular Dynamics simulations to analyze how a particle's motion on a bumpy inclined surface is influenced by collision-induced friction, revealing regular motion patterns and insensitivity to material properties.
Contribution
It demonstrates that steady-state friction force is independent of material properties and provides an analytical estimate for the mean velocity based on simulation data.
Findings
Friction force is independent of material properties like Coulomb friction coefficient.
Particle motion is regular with many small bounces, not chaotic.
Analytical estimation of mean velocity matches simulation results.
Abstract
By means of Molecular Dynamics simulations, we investigate the elementary process of avalanches and size segregation by surface flow in 2 dimensions: a single ball confined to moving along an inclined line consisting of balls. The global characteristics of the motion depend strongly on the size of the moving ball relative to the size of the balls on the line, as well as the distribution of the balls on the line. We find that in the steady state the friction force acting on the ball is independent of material properties like the Coulomb friction coefficient and the coefficient of restitution. Contrary to previous notions about the details of the motion, we find that it is very regular and consists of many small bounces on each ball on the line. As a result of this regularity, introducing a random spacing between the balls on the line has mainly the same influence as a regular spacing of…
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