Predicting residual friction angle of lunar regolith based on Chang'e-5 lunar samples

Jiayan Nie, Yifei Cui*, Kostas Senetakis, Dan Guo, Yu Wang, Guodong Wang, Peng Feng, Huaiyu He, Xuhang Zhang, Xiaoping Zhang, Cunhui Li, Hu Zheng, Wei Hu, Fujun Niu, Quanxing Liu, Anyuan Li

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

Abstract

With the rapid development of human lunar exploration projects, the lunar base establishment and resource utilization are on the way, and hence it is urgent and significant to reasonably predict engineering properties of the lunar regolith, which remains to be unclear due to limited lunar samples currently accessible for geotechnical tests. In this contribution, we aim to address this outstanding challenge from the perspective of granular material mechanics. To this end, the 3D multi-aspect geometrical characteristics and mechanical properties of Chang'e-5 lunar samples are for the first time evaluated with a series of non-destructive microscopic tests. Based on the measured particle surface roughness and Young's modulus, the interparticle friction coefficients of lunar regolith particles are well predicted through an experimental fitting approach using previously published data on terrestrial geomaterials or engineering materials. Then the residual friction angle of the lunar regolith under low confining pressure is predicted as 53° to 56° according to the particle overall regularity and interparticle coefficient of Chang'e-5 lunar samples. The presented results provide a novel cross-scale method to predict engineering properties of lunar regolith from particle scale information to serve for the future lunar surface engineering construction. © 2023 Science China Press.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)730-739
JournalScience Bulletin
Volume68
Issue number7
Online published13 Mar 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Apr 2023

Research Keywords

  • Chang'e-5 lunar samples
  • Cross-scale prediction
  • Geometry
  • Mechanics
  • Residual friction angle
  • Tribology

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