Friction on water sliders

ORAL

Abstract

A body in motion tends to stay in motion but is often slowed by friction. We investigate the friction experienced by centimeter-sized bodies sliding on water. We show that their motion is dominated by skin friction due to the boundary layer that forms in the fluid beneath the body. We develop a simple model that considers the boundary layer as quasi-steady, and is able to capture the experimental behaviour for a range of body sizes, masses, shapes and fluid viscosities. We define a dimensionless sliding number as the ratio between the fluid inertia and the body inertia, which allows us to assess the regime of validity of our model. Furthermore, we demonstrate that friction can be reduced by modification of the body's shape or bottom topography. Our results are significant for understanding natural and artificial bodies moving at the air-water interface, and can inform the design of aerial-aquatic microrobots for environmental exploration and monitoring.

*The authors would like to thank the Brown OVPR Seed Award for partial support of this work.
G. P. thanks the program CNRS Momentum for its support.

Presenters

  • Daniel M Harris

    • School of Engineering, Brown University
    • Brown University

Authors

  • Giuseppe Pucci

    • Institut de Physique de Rennes
    • School of Engineering, Brown University
  • Ian Ho

    • School of Engineering, Brown University
  • Daniel M Harris

    • School of Engineering, Brown University
    • Brown University