Lunar Dust Simulant Particle Adhesion on Copolyimide Alkyl Ethers

2020 
Mitigation of lunar dust contamination is one of the greatest challenges to be overcome to realize a sustained lunar presence. Likely solutions will integrate active mitigation strategies, requiring the input of external energy, and passive materials, exhibiting an intrinsic resistance to lunar dust adhesion. In this work, a series of copolyimide alkyl ethers containing per fluorinated side-chains were generated to evaluate the influence surface modification agents have on surface chemical, topographical, and mechanical properties. An expanded testing protocol to characterize the adhesion interaction between lunar dust simulant and the copolyimide substrate was carried out. The interfacial adhesion strength was in-situ measured by a custom-built particulate adhesion instrument, utilizing a sonic wand. Surface mechanical properties were characterized by nanoindentation, utilizing the continuous stiffness measurement approach. A nominal presence of surface modifying agents, 1 wt%, resulted in a six-fold reduction in adhesion strength of the interface. A strong inverse correlation between the adhesion strength and Young’s modulus of the substrate was identified. The reduction was attributed to a synergistic interaction between the surface energy, surface roughness, and modulus of the copolyimide alkyl ethers film.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []