Friction Formulation
This section provides information about the LuGre and Dahl formulations for friction.
LuGre Model

- The effect of the mating surfaces being pushed apart by lubricant.
- The Stribeck effect at very low speed. When partial fluid lubrication exists, contact between the surfaces decreases and thus friction decreases exponentially from stiction.
- Rate dependent friction phenomena such as varying break-away force and frictional lag.
- Static friction between two surfaces.
- rb
- Ball radius
- FN
- Normal force between a pair of surfaces.
- μs
- Coefficient of static friction.
- μd
-
Coefficient of dynamic friction (µd ≤ µs).
- T
- True friction torque between the surfaces.
- σ0, σ1, σ2, vs
- Constants associated with the LuGre model.
Quantity | Formula |
---|---|
Angular slip velocity | ω_=[ωx ωy ωz]T; ωm=‖ω_‖ |
Bristle states | z_=[zx zy zz]T |
Stiction to dynamic friction transition function | g(ωm)=μd+(μs−μd)e−(rB⋅ωm/vs)2 |
Coupling function | λ(ωm)=rBωmμ2dg(ωm) |
Rate dependence function | C0(ωm)=λ(ωm)σ0μ2d=rBωmσ0g(ωm) |
Model for dynamic simulation |
z_=rBω_−C0z_
μ=−(σ0z_+σ1z_+σ2rω_) r_=rBF_N/‖F_N‖ τ_jforce=˜r_˜μ_F_N τ_preload=(μ_/μs)Tpreload f ‖τ_jforce‖>‖τ_preload‖ τ_=τ_jforce else τ_=τ_preload |
Model for static simulation |
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Dahl Model as a Subset of the LuGre Model

Comparison Between the Dahl and LuGre Models
- Stribeck effect (also known as the stick-slip effect)
- Static Friction > Dynamic Friction
- Bristle damping
- Memory-less damping (viscous damping)
- Rate dependency (such as dependency of friction force on frequency of input)!

The curves in the figure represent the hysteresis loop in the friction models that cause energy dissipation. Notice that the LuGre model (left) is sensitive to the frequency of the input. In contrast the Dahl model (right) shows no change in its response even when the frequency of the inputs change.