Types of Friction
Friction: Types of Friction
Types of Friction
Friction — Types & Factors
What you'll learn
- Friction — force that opposes relative motion between surfaces in contact.
- Three types: static, sliding (kinetic), rolling friction.
- Friction depends on: nature of surfaces and normal force (weight pressing surfaces together).
- Friction is both useful and harmful — examples of each.
- Ways to increase or reduce friction.
Key concepts
Types of friction
| Type | When it acts | Magnitude | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Static | Object at rest, tendency to move | Highest | Book on table before it slides |
| Sliding (kinetic) | Object sliding on surface | Medium | Box being pushed across floor |
| Rolling | Object rolling on surface | Lowest | Ball rolling on ground, wheels |
Rolling friction < Sliding friction < Static friction (in general order).
Factors affecting friction
- Nature of surfaces — rougher surfaces → more friction; polished/smooth → less friction.
- Normal force — heavier object → more friction (more pressing force between surfaces).
Friction does NOT significantly depend on:
- Area of contact (a broad flat box vs a narrow one of same weight → same friction).
- Speed of sliding (approximately, for most school-level problems).
Friction is useful
- Walking, running (feet grip ground).
- Writing (pen/chalk grips paper/board).
- Brakes on vehicles.
- Matches lighting (friction produces heat).
- Conveyor belts, tyres gripping roads.
Friction is harmful
- Wears out machine parts, tyres, soles of shoes.
- Produces unwanted heat in engines → energy loss.
- Slows moving vehicles, reduces efficiency.
Increasing friction
- Using rough surfaces (treads on tyres, grooves on brake pads).
- Sprinkling sand on icy roads.
- Using rubber soles on sports shoes.
Reducing friction
- Polishing surfaces (ball bearings in wheels).
- Lubricants (oil, grease, graphite) between moving parts.
- Streamlining — smooth shape reduces air resistance (fluid friction).
- Using wheels instead of sliding (rolling < sliding friction).
Fluid friction (drag)
- Friction between an object and a fluid (liquid or gas) = drag or fluid friction.
- Streamlined shapes (fish, aircraft, bullet) reduce drag.
- Reduced with: oil, air-filled tyres, boat hulls.
Worked example
Why do kabaddi players rub their hands with soil before the game?
Rubbing soil on hands → increases roughness of skin.
Rough skin + rough opponent's skin → more static and sliding friction.
This gives better grip when holding opponents → harder to escape.
Physics: higher friction force needed to prevent sliding motion (static friction).
Common mistakes
| Mistake | Fix |
|---|---|
| Thinking friction depends on area | Friction depends on normal force and surface texture, NOT contact area |
| Confusing static and kinetic | Static acts before motion; kinetic (sliding) acts during sliding |
| Thinking rolling friction is zero | Rolling friction exists but is much smaller than sliding |
Quick check
- Name three types of friction in increasing order.
- Why do tyres have treads?
- Name two uses of friction and two harmful effects.
- How does a lubricant reduce friction?
- Why are wheels used on heavy luggage trolleys?
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Friction.
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- What you'll learn
- Key concepts
- Worked example
- Common mistakes
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