
doi: 10.1111/srt.12387
pmid: 28573767
AbstractBackground/PurposeThe work outlined in this paper was aimed at achieving further understanding of skin frictional behaviour by investigating the contact area between human finger‐pads and flat surfaces.MethodsBoth the static and the dynamic contact areas (in macro‐ and micro‐scales) were measured using various techniques, including ink printing, optical coherence tomography (OCT) and Digital Image Correlation (DIC).ResultsIn the studies of the static measurements using ink printing, the experimental results showed that the apparent and the real contact area increased with load following a piecewise linear correlation function for a finger‐pad in contact with paper sheets. Comparisons indicated that the OCT method is a reliable and effective method to investigate the real contact area of a finger‐pad and allow micro‐scale analysis. The apparent contact area (from the DIC measurements) was found to reduce with time in the transition from the static phase to the dynamic phase while the real area of contact (from OCT) increased.ConclusionsThe results from this study enable the interaction between finger‐pads and contact object surface to be better analysed, and hence improve the understanding of skin friction.
TP, Adult, Friction, Surface Properties, TK, Ink printing method, Fingers, Weight-Bearing, DIC, OCT, Touch, Skin Physiological Phenomena, Humans, Female, Dermatoglyphics, Skin tribology, Tomography, Optical Coherence, Contact area, Skin
TP, Adult, Friction, Surface Properties, TK, Ink printing method, Fingers, Weight-Bearing, DIC, OCT, Touch, Skin Physiological Phenomena, Humans, Female, Dermatoglyphics, Skin tribology, Tomography, Optical Coherence, Contact area, Skin
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