RI 7543 Gravity Flow Of Powder In A Lunar Environment (In Two Parts) 1. Property Determination Of Simulated Lunar Soil

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 38
- File Size:
- 9848 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1971
Abstract
This report investigates the mechanical behavior of fine soils in a lunar environment in engineering gravity-flow bins. The ultrahigh vacuum, absence of moisture, and a lunar gravity one-sixth that of earth gravity represents a unique environment, both advantageous and detrimental to these systems. On earth, moisture and gases contained in powder masses can be responsible for complex descriptions of gravity flow. Their absence appear to simplify the lunar soil behavior. However, simulation of the lunar gravity and vacuum complicates the development of experimental data for designing bins. The properties of a dry soil powder, its behavior under one-dimensional compression, and its torsional and direct shearing strength under earth atmosphere are described in part 1 of this paper. These properties provide the parameters for a finite-element analysis to optimize the design of bins, to be described by Dr. William Pariseau in part 2. Shear tests assess the failure criteria for the material. Compression tests provide modulus and (Ko) stress-ratio values from the loading portion of the compression cycle, duplicating the condition of a bin at rest with the discharge closed. During the unloading portion of the compression cycle (soil overconsolidated), the residual Ko values rise. It is postulated that this phenomenon creates a high-lateral stress in bins when they approach incipient flow. Assessment of the Ko value, overconsolidation ratio, and the void ratio state is proposed as a criterion to determine the flowability of powder.
Citation
APA:
(1971) RI 7543 Gravity Flow Of Powder In A Lunar Environment (In Two Parts) 1. Property Determination Of Simulated Lunar SoilMLA: RI 7543 Gravity Flow Of Powder In A Lunar Environment (In Two Parts) 1. Property Determination Of Simulated Lunar Soil. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1971.