Compression Behaviour of Porous Dust Agglomerates
Alexander Seizinger, Roland Speith, Wilhelm Kley

TL;DR
This study uses molecular dynamics simulations to refine the material parameters of porous dust agglomerates, improving the modeling of their compression behavior and implications for planetesimal growth.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new micro-physical model for dust grain interactions and adjusts parameters to better match laboratory experiments, enhancing the understanding of dust agglomerate compression.
Findings
Existing models are too soft in compression behavior.
Stiffer rolling and sliding coefficients improve model accuracy.
Compression strength depends on the velocity of compression.
Abstract
The early planetesimal growth proceeds through a sequence of sticking collisions of dust agglomerates. Very uncertain is still the relative velocity regime in which growth rather than destruction can take place. The outcome of a collision depends on the bulk properties of the porous dust agglomerates. Continuum models of dust agglomerates require a set of material parameters that are often difficult to obtain from laboratory experiments. Here, we aim at determining those parameters from ab-initio molecular dynamics simulations. Our goal is to improveon the existing model that describe the interaction of individual monomers. We use a molecular dynamics approach featuring a detailed micro-physical model of the interaction of spherical grains. The model includes normal forces, rolling, twisting and sliding between the dust grains. We present a new treatment of wall-particle interaction…
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