Friction force
F_f = mu x N
Material property lookup
Compare approximate static and kinetic friction coefficients for dry, lubricated, polymer, rubber, wood, and ice contact pairs.
Instant friction lookup
Select a material pair to view approximate static and kinetic friction coefficients.
Selected value
Reference table
| Material Pair | Group | Static Coefficient | Kinetic Coefficient | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Steel on Steel, dry | Metal pair | 0.60 | 0.40 | Clean dry surfaces |
| Steel on Steel, lubricated | Metal pair | 0.15 | 0.05 | Lubricant and finish dependent |
| Aluminum on Steel | Metal pair | 0.45 | 0.30 | Approximate dry value |
| Copper on Steel | Metal pair | 0.53 | 0.36 | Approximate dry value |
| Brass on Steel | Metal pair | 0.51 | 0.35 | Approximate dry value |
| PTFE on Steel | Polymer pair | 0.04 | 0.04 | Low-friction polymer |
| Nylon on Steel | Polymer pair | 0.25 | 0.20 | Moisture and finish dependent |
| Rubber on Dry Concrete | Tire/contact | 0.90 | 0.70 | Approximate dry traction |
| Rubber on Wet Concrete | Tire/contact | 0.60 | 0.45 | Condition dependent |
| Wood on Wood | Wood pair | 0.40 | 0.30 | Grain and moisture dependent |
| Ice on Ice | Ice pair | 0.10 | 0.03 | Temperature dependent |
Formulas
F_f = mu x N
tan(theta) = mu_s
At impending slip
Friction coefficients are approximate and highly sensitive to surface finish, lubrication, contamination, speed, temperature, and contact pressure.
Reference
Kinetic friction estimates force while surfaces slide.
Static friction estimates whether a contact will begin to move.
Friction affects brakes, clutches, guides, bearings, fasteners, and wear.
Critical designs should use measured friction values for the actual surface condition.
FAQ
It is the ratio of friction force to normal force between two contacting surfaces.
For many material pairs, static friction is higher than kinetic friction.
Surface finish, lubrication, contamination, wear, speed, load, and temperature all affect friction.
Related
Bulk modulus values for common solids and fluids used in compressibility checks.
Density values for metals, polymers, ceramics, and construction materials.
Approximate Rockwell, Brinell, Vickers, and tensile strength conversion values.
Melting point reference values for common metals, plastics, and engineering materials.
Poisson ratio values for common engineering solids.
Shear modulus values for metals, polymers, ceramics, and construction materials.
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