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Vibration effects on lunar regolith simulants depend on particle size and direction

Engineering research
Photo by MabelAmber on Pixabay · Pixabay License
Research area:EngineeringComputational MechanicsParticle Dynamics in Fluid Flows

What the study found

The simulants showed different convective behavior depending on particle size and whether vibrations were vertical or horizontal. Vertical vibrations strengthened convective motion as average particle size increased, while horizontal vibrations generally produced stronger convection as average particle size decreased.

Why the authors say this matters

The study suggests this matters because granular fluidization may help reduce the frictional and electrostatic forces in lunar regolith, which the authors note could be useful for excavation, transport, and potential future uses of lunar material such as construction feedstock, plant-growth substrate, or extraction of oxygen and propellant.

What the researchers tested

The researchers vibrated three lunar regolith simulants with different particle size ranges: <0.04–250, <0.04–90, and <0.04–35 μm. They varied vibration frequency, amplitude, and direction to observe fluidlike behavior and convective motion.

What worked and what didn't

Vertical vibrations strengthened convective motion in simulants with larger average particle size. Horizontal vibrations showed the opposite pattern, with overall convective movement generally increasing as average particle size decreased.

What to keep in mind

The abstract does not give detailed experimental limitations beyond the tested size ranges and vibration conditions. It also notes that, for the finest simulant, a specific frequency led to particle aggregation regardless of vibration direction, forming macroscopic clusters through electrostatic forces.

Key points

  • Vertical vibrations strengthened convection as average particle size increased.
  • Horizontal vibrations generally increased convection as average particle size decreased.
  • Different convective modes—transverse, longitudinal, and hybrid—could be excited by changing vibration frequency, strength, and direction.
  • For the smallest-particle simulant, a specific frequency produced particle aggregation regardless of vibration direction.
  • The aggregation was described as macroscopic clustering caused by electrostatic forces.

Disclosure

Research title:
Vibration effects on lunar regolith simulants depend on particle size and direction
Authors:
Craig McKenzie, Peter Watson, S. Vincent-Bonnieu, Marcello Lappa
Institutions:
University of Strathclyde, European Space Agency, European Space Research and Technology Centre
Publication date:
2026-04-21
OpenAlex record:
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Image credit:
Photo by MabelAmber on Pixabay · Pixabay License
AI provenance: This post was generated by OpenAI. The original authors did not write or review this post.