Beyond Quality and Quantity: Contact Distribution Encodes Frictional Strength
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Classically, the quantity of contact area $A_R$ between two bodies is considered a proxy for the force of friction. However, bond density across the interface - quality of contact - is also relevant, and contemporary debate often centers around the relative importance of these two factors. In this work, we demonstrate that a third factor, often overlooked, plays a significant role in static frictional strength: the distribution of contact. We perform static friction measurements, $\mu$, on three pairs of solid blocks while imaging the contact plane. By using linear regression on hundreds of image-$\mu$ pairs, we are able to predict future friction measurements with 3 to 7 times better accuracy than existing benchmarks, including total quantity of contact area. Our model has no access to quality of contact, and we therefore conclude that a large portion of the interfacial state is encoded in the spatial distribution of contact, rather than its quality or quantity.
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