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Science
Related: About this forumPaper types ranked by likelihood of paper cuts
https://phys.org/news/2024-08-paper-likelihood.htmlAUGUST 27, 2024 REPORT
Paper types ranked by likelihood of paper cuts
by Bob Yirka , Phys.org
The physics of paper cuts. Credit: Physical Review E (2024). DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.110.025003
Via testing with a skin stand-in, a trio of physicists at Technical University of Denmark has ranked the types of paper that are the most likely to cause a paper cut. In an article published in Physical Review E, Sif Fink Arnbjerg-Nielsen, Matthew Biviano and Kaare Jensen tested the cutting ability and circumstances involved in paper cuts to compile their rankings.
Paper cuts occur through the handling of paper products. In addition to the nuisance factor due to the sudden flow of blood, there is also often a great deal of pain involved. In this new effort, the researchers noted that most research done on the topic revolves around infection factors. They chose instead to focus on the types of paper most likely to cause a cut, thereby allowing paper users a means to reduce their chances of an injury.
To test the cutting ability of different types of paper, the researchers used ballistics gelatin as a stand-in for skin. They then attempted to cut the gelatin using multiple types of paper. They noted the sturdiness and thickness of the paper, and the angles that were involved when cutting occurred.
The research team found that paper that was the most thin was unlikely to cause a cut because it tended to buckle instead. Also, thick paper rarely led to a cut because its surface was spread over too large an area. That left paper that is neither too thick nor too thin, like the kind that is used in newspapers or dot-matrix printersthe two types tied for the title "Most likely to cut skin."
[...]
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https://journals.aps.org/pre/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevE.110.025003
(subscription required for full text/pdf)
Paper types ranked by likelihood of paper cuts
by Bob Yirka , Phys.org
The physics of paper cuts. Credit: Physical Review E (2024). DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.110.025003
Via testing with a skin stand-in, a trio of physicists at Technical University of Denmark has ranked the types of paper that are the most likely to cause a paper cut. In an article published in Physical Review E, Sif Fink Arnbjerg-Nielsen, Matthew Biviano and Kaare Jensen tested the cutting ability and circumstances involved in paper cuts to compile their rankings.
Paper cuts occur through the handling of paper products. In addition to the nuisance factor due to the sudden flow of blood, there is also often a great deal of pain involved. In this new effort, the researchers noted that most research done on the topic revolves around infection factors. They chose instead to focus on the types of paper most likely to cause a cut, thereby allowing paper users a means to reduce their chances of an injury.
To test the cutting ability of different types of paper, the researchers used ballistics gelatin as a stand-in for skin. They then attempted to cut the gelatin using multiple types of paper. They noted the sturdiness and thickness of the paper, and the angles that were involved when cutting occurred.
The research team found that paper that was the most thin was unlikely to cause a cut because it tended to buckle instead. Also, thick paper rarely led to a cut because its surface was spread over too large an area. That left paper that is neither too thick nor too thin, like the kind that is used in newspapers or dot-matrix printersthe two types tied for the title "Most likely to cut skin."
[...]
===========
https://journals.aps.org/pre/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevE.110.025003
(subscription required for full text/pdf)
Competition between slicing and buckling underlies the erratic nature of paper cuts
Sif Fink Arnbjerg-Nielsen, Matthew D. Biviano, and Kaare H. Jensen
Phys. Rev. E 110, 025003 Published 23 August 2024
Article has an altmetric score of 35
ABSTRACT
By enabling the dissemination and storage of information, paper has been central to human culture for more than a millennium. Its use is, however, associated with a common injury: the paper cut. Surprisingly, the physics underpinning a flexible sheet of paper slicing into soft tissues remains unresolved. In particular, the unpredictable occurrence of paper cuts, often restricted to a limited thickness range, has not been explained. Here we visualize and quantify the motion, deformation, and stresses during paper cuts, uncovering a remarkably complex relationship between cutting, geometry, and material properties. A model based on the hypothesis that a competition between slicing and buckling controls the probability of initiating a paper cut is developed and successfully validated. This explains why paper with a specific thickness is most hazardous (65µm, corresponding, e.g., to dot matrix paper) and suggests a probabilistic interpretation of irregular occurrence of paper cuts. Stimulated by these findings, we finally show how a recyclable cutting tool can harness the surprising power of paper.
Sif Fink Arnbjerg-Nielsen, Matthew D. Biviano, and Kaare H. Jensen
Phys. Rev. E 110, 025003 Published 23 August 2024
Article has an altmetric score of 35
ABSTRACT
By enabling the dissemination and storage of information, paper has been central to human culture for more than a millennium. Its use is, however, associated with a common injury: the paper cut. Surprisingly, the physics underpinning a flexible sheet of paper slicing into soft tissues remains unresolved. In particular, the unpredictable occurrence of paper cuts, often restricted to a limited thickness range, has not been explained. Here we visualize and quantify the motion, deformation, and stresses during paper cuts, uncovering a remarkably complex relationship between cutting, geometry, and material properties. A model based on the hypothesis that a competition between slicing and buckling controls the probability of initiating a paper cut is developed and successfully validated. This explains why paper with a specific thickness is most hazardous (65µm, corresponding, e.g., to dot matrix paper) and suggests a probabilistic interpretation of irregular occurrence of paper cuts. Stimulated by these findings, we finally show how a recyclable cutting tool can harness the surprising power of paper.
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Paper types ranked by likelihood of paper cuts (Original Post)
sl8
Aug 28
OP
True Dough
(20,350 posts)1. Seriously,
has anyone ever got a paper cut from tissue paper? It deserves to be on the low end of the scale. I have a hard time believing it could happen at all.
Leave tissue paper alone (unless you have to blow your nose)!
NotASurfer
(2,314 posts)2. This has to be in the running for an Ig Nobel prize
Somehow I imagine a new ANSI standard for product safety warnings deriving from stuff like this when I read it
stopdiggin
(12,852 posts)3. in looking at the graph - - I don't think I have ever
sustained a paper cut from a magazine. Is this a common occurrence with others?
(which doesn't say anything at all about the validity of the study or what is presented) Just remarking that it doesn't quite square with personal experience here.
Aussie105
(6,283 posts)4. I'm prepared to support this research by focussing on paper money.
Please send testing materials to me, ASAP.