3.9 Article

Lifting of Tribocharged Grains by Martian Winds

Journal

PLANETARY SCIENCE JOURNAL
Volume 2, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/PSJ/ac38a4

Keywords

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Funding

  1. DLR Space Administration
  2. Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy (BMWi) [DLR 50 WM 1762, DLR 50 WM 2142]
  3. European Union [101004052]
  4. German Research Foundation through the Heisenberg Grant [434377576]

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This study suggests that electrification of wind-blown sand can significantly lower the minimal threshold wind shear velocity for sand transport occurrence on Mars, potentially making it easier to restart particle transport that subsides once the wind shear velocity has fallen below the threshold for sustained transport than previously thought.
It is a long-standing open question whether electrification of wind-blown sand due to tribocharging-the generation of electric charges on the surface of sand grains by particle-particle collisions-could affect rates of sand transport occurrence on Mars substantially. While previous wind tunnel experiments and numerical simulations addressed how particle trajectories may be affected by external electric fields, the effect of sand electrification remains uncertain. Here we show, by means of wind tunnel simulations under air pressure of 20 mbar, that the presence of electric charges on the particle surface can reduce the minimal threshold wind shear velocity for the initiation of sand transport, u (*ft), significantly. In our experiments, we considered different samples, a model system of glass beads as well as a Martian soil analog, and different scenarios of triboelectrification. Furthermore, we present a model to explain the values of u (*ft) obtained in the wind tunnel that is based on inhomogeneously distributed surface charges. Our results imply that particle transport that subsides, once the wind shear velocity has fallen below the threshold for sustained transport, can more easily be restarted on Mars than previously thought.

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