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Gas flow through porous cometary media
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<p>Over the last few decades, our picture of comets has been continuously changing and growing due to several successful space missions, as well as cometary simulation projects in the laboratory (e.g. KOSI 1987-1992, CoPhyLab 2018 - 2021). This work aims for a better understanding of the gas transport through a porous cometary surface layer. Therefore, gas flow measurements have been performed in our laboratory to investigate the permeability of several analogue materials, which have been chosen to mimic cometary surface properties.</p><p>For the first measurements, which we are reporting here, only dry materials, free of volatiles have been selected, to isolate the gas transport from gas production inside the materials. They include glass beads made of soda lime glass, which are sieved into separate fractions to obtain distinct grain size ranges from 45&#160;&#181;m up to 4.3&#160;mm. The Mars simulant JSC-Mars 1 is used in the experiments, as well as JSC-1 as a lunar soil simulant. Furthermore, an Asteroid analogue material named UCF/DSI-CI-2 from the Exolith&#160;Lab in Florida is also used. A quartz sand called UK4 mined at a local quarry in Graz is investigated as well. In a further step, a sample is created by mixing different grain size fractions of the glass beads replicating the grain size distribution of the Asteroid simulant.</p><p>The materials are also treated on a shaking table in order to obtain the packing properties of the samples. For the gas flow experiments a cylindrical sample container, with 4&#160;cm diameter, is filled with the sample (30&#160;mm in height) and placed inside of the vacuum chamber at the interface of two separate volumes. Four pressure sensors covering different pressure ranges monitor the gas pressure in the two volumes. A vacuum pump in the lower volume removes the gas from the chamber and through a gas inlet a defined flow of the test gas (compressed air) is inserted into the upper volume. Due to this set-up, the gas flow can only pass through the sample material. To avoid particle fluidisation and thus a texture change in the sample the gas flow is intentionally directed downwards through the sample. The gas flow is controlled by regulators from 0.15&#160;mg/s up to 19.2&#160;mg/s. Via the measured pressure difference between the upper and lower volume, in equilibrium flow, the gas permeability and the Knudsen diffusion coefficient of the sample material are obtained. The gas flow experiments show that the grain size distribution and the packing density of the sample play a major role for the permeability of the sample. From the analysis of the permeability measurements it is clearly visible that the larger the grains the bigger the permeability. The measured permeability values range from 10<sup>-13</sup> to 10<sup>-8</sup>&#160;m&#178;. This work is part of the CoPhyLab project funded by the D-A-CH programme (DFG GU1620/3-1 and BL 298/26-1 / SNF 200021E 177964 / FWF I 3730-N36).</p>
Title: Gas flow through porous cometary media
Description:
<p>Over the last few decades, our picture of comets has been continuously changing and growing due to several successful space missions, as well as cometary simulation projects in the laboratory (e.
g.
KOSI 1987-1992, CoPhyLab 2018 - 2021).
This work aims for a better understanding of the gas transport through a porous cometary surface layer.
Therefore, gas flow measurements have been performed in our laboratory to investigate the permeability of several analogue materials, which have been chosen to mimic cometary surface properties.
</p><p>For the first measurements, which we are reporting here, only dry materials, free of volatiles have been selected, to isolate the gas transport from gas production inside the materials.
They include glass beads made of soda lime glass, which are sieved into separate fractions to obtain distinct grain size ranges from 45&#160;&#181;m up to 4.
3&#160;mm.
The Mars simulant JSC-Mars 1 is used in the experiments, as well as JSC-1 as a lunar soil simulant.
Furthermore, an Asteroid analogue material named UCF/DSI-CI-2 from the Exolith&#160;Lab in Florida is also used.
A quartz sand called UK4 mined at a local quarry in Graz is investigated as well.
In a further step, a sample is created by mixing different grain size fractions of the glass beads replicating the grain size distribution of the Asteroid simulant.
</p><p>The materials are also treated on a shaking table in order to obtain the packing properties of the samples.
For the gas flow experiments a cylindrical sample container, with 4&#160;cm diameter, is filled with the sample (30&#160;mm in height) and placed inside of the vacuum chamber at the interface of two separate volumes.
Four pressure sensors covering different pressure ranges monitor the gas pressure in the two volumes.
A vacuum pump in the lower volume removes the gas from the chamber and through a gas inlet a defined flow of the test gas (compressed air) is inserted into the upper volume.
Due to this set-up, the gas flow can only pass through the sample material.
To avoid particle fluidisation and thus a texture change in the sample the gas flow is intentionally directed downwards through the sample.
The gas flow is controlled by regulators from 0.
15&#160;mg/s up to 19.
2&#160;mg/s.
Via the measured pressure difference between the upper and lower volume, in equilibrium flow, the gas permeability and the Knudsen diffusion coefficient of the sample material are obtained.
The gas flow experiments show that the grain size distribution and the packing density of the sample play a major role for the permeability of the sample.
From the analysis of the permeability measurements it is clearly visible that the larger the grains the bigger the permeability.
The measured permeability values range from 10<sup>-13</sup> to 10<sup>-8</sup>&#160;m&#178;.
This work is part of the CoPhyLab project funded by the D-A-CH programme (DFG GU1620/3-1 and BL 298/26-1 / SNF 200021E 177964 / FWF I 3730-N36).
</p>.
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