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Acoustic tribology

A recent technological advance has enabled the non-invasive study of the complex interaction between the human mouth and food during the eating process.



In "acoustic tribology" the sound emissions from the tongue-food interface are detected and a frequency spectrum is produced. The profile of this spectrum can quantitatively represent the person's sensation. Food scientists can therefore relate the person's emotional response to the food more directly to a quantifiable parameter.



http://www.nizo.com/explore/expertises/texture/acoustic-tribology



I think this is a remarkable step in several areas that are widely relevant to tribology:


  1. The tribological interface is investigated non-invasively. This is a good example of a recurring task in tribology: deducing the conditions at the interface from a diverse range of external signals.


  • The technique presumably requires state-of-the-art transducers that are compact, robust and durable in harsh operating conditions.


  • The signal processing techniques must be remarkably sophisticated to separate the tongue/food noise emissions from those of the teeth and other parts of the mouth. In short, to yield a useful signal to noise ratio from this method is a great achievement.


Does this story catch your interest? Why not post some of your insights into the tribology of food, or the possible wider uses of acoustic tribology?
  • I have added a video on "acoustic tribology" within our Videos section (top right menu).



    https://communities.theiet.org/communities/videos/69/374
  • Hi Duc,

    That's a very good idea. The combination of the tribological study with the brain scan data will inform decision-making in product development. I think this sums up how tribology is most usually applied in industry, i.e. the application of knowledge. Should we call this triboengineering? What do you think?

    Best regards,

    Geoff