Collisions between micro-sized aggregates: role of porosity, mass ratio, and impact velocity

Author:

Planes María Belén1,Millán Emmanuel N2,Urbassek Herbert M3ORCID,Bringa Eduardo M14

Affiliation:

1. CONICET and Facultad de Ingenería, Universidad de Mendoza, Mendoza 5500, Argentina

2. CONICET, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales and ITIC, Universidad Nacional de Cuyo, Mendoza 5500, Argentina

3. Physics Department and Research Center OPTIMAS, University Kaiserslautern, Erwin-Schrödinger-Straße, D-67663 Kaiserslautern, Germany

4. Centro de Nanotecnología Aplicada, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Mayor, Av. Alemania 281, Temuco, Santiago, Chile

Abstract

ABSTRACT Dust aggregate collisions usually occur between mass-asymmetric collision partners. Granular-mechanics simulations are used to study the influence of filling factor, φ, and impact velocity in collisions of spherical granular aggregates with different values of their mass ratio, but the same filling factor. Three possible outcomes are observed: (i) sticking, which might include penetration of the smaller aggregate into the larger aggregate; (ii) fragmentation of the largest aggregate into two large fragments, particularly due to the so-called piston effect for low filling factors; and (iii) total destruction of the aggregates. Most of the impact energy is spent by friction, with some fraction leading to compaction of the porous material. The erosion efficiency varies significantly with impact velocity, mass ratio, and porosity, but the accretion efficiency does not show such strong variations. For highly asymmetric collisions with high impact velocities (≃100 m s−1), grain accretion (growth) can occur for a ‘window’ in the filling factor (0.20 < φ < 0.35). This window becomes wider as the impact velocity decreases. As the mass ratio of the aggregates decreases, the impact velocities that enable growth can also decrease. The mass distribution of the fragments follows a power-law distribution that is almost independent of the mass ratio, filling factor, and velocity.

Funder

SIIP-UNCuyo

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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