Experimental Evaluation and Semi-Empirical Modeling of the Tractive Performance of Rigid and Flexible Wheels on Lunar Soil Simulant
Understanding the effects of various wheel parameters on tractive performance is not completely understood. In order to properly quantify the individual effects of wheel parameters on the mobility of rigid and flexible wheels in soft soil, tests were performed, in cooperation with NASA Glenn Researc...
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ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-339952020-09-26T05:36:38Z Experimental Evaluation and Semi-Empirical Modeling of the Tractive Performance of Rigid and Flexible Wheels on Lunar Soil Simulant Taylor, Benjamin Paul Mechanical Engineering Sandu, Corina Ahmadian, Mehdi Taheri, Saied wheel mobility off-road testing Lunar soil simulant Understanding the effects of various wheel parameters on tractive performance is not completely understood. In order to properly quantify the individual effects of wheel parameters on the mobility of rigid and flexible wheels in soft soil, tests were performed, in cooperation with NASA Glenn Research Center (NASA-GRC), using the terramechanics rig at the Virginia Tech Advanced Vehicle Dynamics Lab (AVDL). To conduct such a study, four different wheels were evaluated under similar normal loads, slip ratios, and soil density. The first wheel represents the baseline, against which all the others were benchmarked. The remaining three wheels included the following parameter changes: 1) same diameter as the baseline but wider, 2) same width as the baseline but smaller in diameter, and 3) same width and diameter as the baseline but with a longer contact length. For each test the normal load, drawbar pull, and driving torque were measured and recorded for further analysis. To measure the effect of the changes in the wheelsâ parameters on the contact patch under different loads, a pressure pad was embedded below the surface of the Lunar simulant to measure the contact patch shape, size, and pressure distribution. Analysis of the experimental results showed that the drawbar pull was more significantly affected by the wheel diameter than by the contact width, and that same trend followed suit for the driving torque. Overall, the greater contact patch area resulted in a higher drawbar pull and torque. Master of Science 2014-03-14T20:41:25Z 2014-03-14T20:41:25Z 2009-07-09 2009-07-13 2009-07-21 2009-07-21 Thesis etd-07132009-163511 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/33995 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07132009-163511/ Ben_Taylor_Masters_Thesis_Final_ETD.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech |
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wheel mobility off-road testing Lunar soil simulant |
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wheel mobility off-road testing Lunar soil simulant Taylor, Benjamin Paul Experimental Evaluation and Semi-Empirical Modeling of the Tractive Performance of Rigid and Flexible Wheels on Lunar Soil Simulant |
description |
Understanding the effects of various wheel parameters on tractive performance is not completely understood. In order to properly quantify the individual effects of wheel parameters on the mobility of rigid and flexible wheels in soft soil, tests were performed, in cooperation with NASA Glenn Research Center (NASA-GRC), using the terramechanics rig at the Virginia Tech Advanced Vehicle Dynamics Lab (AVDL). To conduct such a study, four different wheels were evaluated under similar normal loads, slip ratios, and soil density. The first wheel represents the baseline, against which all the others were benchmarked. The remaining three wheels included the following parameter changes: 1) same diameter as the baseline but wider, 2) same width as the baseline but smaller in diameter, and 3) same width and diameter as the baseline but with a longer contact length. For each test the normal load, drawbar pull, and driving torque were measured and recorded for further analysis. To measure the effect of the changes in the wheelsâ parameters on the contact patch under different loads, a pressure pad was embedded below the surface of the Lunar simulant to measure the contact patch shape, size, and pressure distribution. Analysis of the experimental results showed that the drawbar pull was more significantly affected by the wheel diameter than by the contact width, and that same trend followed suit for the driving torque. Overall, the greater contact patch area resulted in a higher drawbar pull and torque. === Master of Science |
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Mechanical Engineering |
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Mechanical Engineering Taylor, Benjamin Paul |
author |
Taylor, Benjamin Paul |
author_sort |
Taylor, Benjamin Paul |
title |
Experimental Evaluation and Semi-Empirical Modeling of the Tractive Performance of Rigid and Flexible Wheels on Lunar Soil Simulant |
title_short |
Experimental Evaluation and Semi-Empirical Modeling of the Tractive Performance of Rigid and Flexible Wheels on Lunar Soil Simulant |
title_full |
Experimental Evaluation and Semi-Empirical Modeling of the Tractive Performance of Rigid and Flexible Wheels on Lunar Soil Simulant |
title_fullStr |
Experimental Evaluation and Semi-Empirical Modeling of the Tractive Performance of Rigid and Flexible Wheels on Lunar Soil Simulant |
title_full_unstemmed |
Experimental Evaluation and Semi-Empirical Modeling of the Tractive Performance of Rigid and Flexible Wheels on Lunar Soil Simulant |
title_sort |
experimental evaluation and semi-empirical modeling of the tractive performance of rigid and flexible wheels on lunar soil simulant |
publisher |
Virginia Tech |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/33995 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07132009-163511/ |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT taylorbenjaminpaul experimentalevaluationandsemiempiricalmodelingofthetractiveperformanceofrigidandflexiblewheelsonlunarsoilsimulant |
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