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Pneumatic Sampling in Extreme Terrain with the Axel Rover

Pneumatic Sampling in Extreme Terrain with the Axel Rover. Yifei Huang. 8.23.12 Frank W. Wood SURF Fellow. Overview. Motivation Pneumatic Sampling Concept, and feasibility Design & Testing Nozzle Cyclone Sample Container Pressure Container Instrument Deployment Conclusions.

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Pneumatic Sampling in Extreme Terrain with the Axel Rover

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  1. Pneumatic Sampling in Extreme Terrain with the Axel Rover Yifei Huang. 8.23.12 Frank W. Wood SURF Fellow

  2. Overview • Motivation • Pneumatic Sampling • Concept, and feasibility • Design & Testing • Nozzle • Cyclone • Sample Container • Pressure Container • Instrument Deployment • Conclusions

  3. Sampling in Extreme Terrain • Satellite images suggest liquid brine flow • Spectroscopy images – negative results for water • Difficulties in sampling • Newton Crater: 25-40 degree slopes • MER:15 degree slopes • Curiosity: 30 degree slopes • Solution • Axel rover: vertical slopes Figure: http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/. Sources: http://ssed.gsfc.nasa.gov/sam/curiosity.html, http://usrp.usra.edu/technicalPapers/jpl/HooverMay11.pdf

  4. The Axel rover DuAxel rover Traversing cliffs Instrument deploy Goal: Develop a sampling system on Axel

  5. What is pneumatic sampling? • 1. Release pressurized air • Actuator opens and closes a cylinder of pressurized air • 2. Air flows down the outer tube of the nozzle • 3. Air enters inner tube, carrying soil with it • Nozzle is already embedded in dirt • Up is the path of least resistance • 4. Soil and air flow up into sample container Figure: Zacny et al. (2010)

  6. Why Pneumatics? • Fewer moving components, low number of actuators, less risk for failure • Closed tubing: low instrument contamination • Energy efficient • A small amount of air can lift a large amount of dirt • 1 g of gas lifted 5000g of soil [Zacny and Bar-Cohen, 2009] • Easier soil transportation

  7. Design: Nozzle • Round #1 Nozzle #2 Soil Level Nozzle #3 Nozzle #1

  8. Design: Nozzle • Nozzles built on the 3D printer (ABS plastic) • Tests with loose sand (400um size) • 25psi air was released for 2 sec

  9. Design: Nozzle • Round #2 Sand: Dirt: Nozzle #4 Nozzle #5

  10. Design: Cyclone Separator • Used to separate air and soil • Dusty air will enter tangential to cyclone • Larger particles have too much inertia • Hit the side of cyclone and fall down • Smaller particles remain in the cyclone • Pushed up into the Vortex Finder by pressure gradient Vortex Finder Cylindrical portion Conical portion Small Particle Large Particle Design by Honeybee Robotics Figure: DB Ingham and L Ma, “Predicting the performance of air cyclones”

  11. Design: Sample Container • Objective: Minimize actuation with springs Concept: Design: Cyclone Sample Container Spring

  12. Design: Instrument Deployment • Second 4-bar linkage attached to original 4-bar • Motion of 2 4-bars are coupled • Advantages: No actuator on deployed plate Nozzle is attached here

  13. Benchtop test stands • Instrument deploy • Sample Caching

  14. Design: Pressure Container

  15. Benchtop Test • Tests with loose sand (400um size) • 25psi air was released for 2 sec

  16. Contamination • In sand • Weighed cyclone, tubing, and nozzle before and after tests • Negligible mass: ~0.2% of lifted mass remained in cyclone/tubing/nozzle • In dirt • Soil is stuck inside nozzle and cyclone • Cyclone: 50-300% of lifted mass • Nozzle: 50-150% of lifted mass

  17. Effects of Pressure • Tests with loose sand (400um size) • Air from wall was released for 2 sec

  18. Conclusions • Pneumatics is feasible • Successfully acquired 2g of soil • Improvements needed: • Acquiring moist soils (dirt) • Taking multiple samples • Placing system inside Axel

  19. Acknowledgements • Kristen Holtz, co-worker • Funding: • Keck Institute for Space Studies • Caltech Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF) • Mentoring: • Melissa Tanner, Professor Joel Burdick, Caltech • JPL Axel Team • Kris Zacny, Honeybee Robotics • Prof. Melany Hunt, Prof. Bethany Elhmann • Paul Backes, Paulo Younse, JPL

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