Comparative performance of granular scaling laws for lightweight grouser wheels in sand and lunar simulant

Andrew Thoesen, Teresa McBryan, Darwin Mick, Marko Green, Justin Martia, Hamid Marvi

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Scopus citations

Abstract

Recently developed granular scaling laws create new opportunities to evaluate particle dynamics between environment and wheel shapes. We investigate the performance of straight grousered (i.e. protrusions added to the wheel rim to better engage the soil) wheels and helical grousered wheels in both silica sand and crushed basalt lunar simulant. Mechanical power draw and velocity of the wheels are compared in both materials for performance assessment. The scaling laws are evaluated for Earth gravity experimentally and reduced gravity through coupled multi-body dynamic and discrete element method (MBD-DEM) simulations. Experimental results show general power prediction error between 20 and 35% for crushed basalt and 15–25% error for silica sand. Velocity prediction error showed high dependence on material, with silica sand error generally between 4 and 10% and crushed basalt varied between 0 and 27%. Simulation results match theoretical predictions more closely with power error under 8% and velocity error under 4% for most speeds. The experimental error was further investigated and shows a new scaling dependency on sinkage (depth which the wheel rim sinks below the terrain surface) thresholds.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)336-346
Number of pages11
JournalPowder Technology
Volume373
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2020

Keywords

  • Discrete element method
  • Granular material
  • Granular matter
  • Lunar simulant
  • Scaling Laws
  • Soil mechanics

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Chemical Engineering

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