Granular Temperature and Segregation in Dense Sheared Particulate Mixtures

In gravity-driven flows of different-sized (same density) particles, it is well known that larger particles tend to segregate upward (toward the free surface), and the smaller particles downward in the direction of gravity. Alternatively, when the particles are of the same size but different density...

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Main Authors: Kimberly M. Hill, Yi Fan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hosokawa Powder Technology Foundation 2016-02-01
Series:KONA Powder and Particle Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/kona/33/0/33_2016022/_html/-char/en
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spelling doaj-eb9bff1fc2304fdeaa6ab928653eb20e2021-02-03T00:48:56ZengHosokawa Powder Technology FoundationKONA Powder and Particle Journal0288-45342187-55372016-02-0133015016810.14356/kona.2016022konaGranular Temperature and Segregation in Dense Sheared Particulate MixturesKimberly M. Hill0Yi Fan1St. Anthony Falls Laboratory and the Department of Civil, Environmental, and Geo-Engineering, University of Minnesota, USAThe Dow Chemical Company, USAIn gravity-driven flows of different-sized (same density) particles, it is well known that larger particles tend to segregate upward (toward the free surface), and the smaller particles downward in the direction of gravity. Alternatively, when the particles are of the same size but different density, lighter particles tend to segregate upward and heavier particles, downward. When particles differ in both size and density, true of most mixtures of interest in industry and nature, the details are complicated and no rule based on gravity alone has captured the segregation behaviours. Gradients of granular temperature and kinetic stress (i.e., energy and stress associated with velocity fluctuations) offer alternative segregation driving forces, but have, until recently, been discounted as these dynamics are relatively small in dense flows. Recently, gradients in kinetic stress have been shown to play a significant role in segregating densely sheared particle mixtures, even where the kinetic stress is a relatively small percentage of the total stress. We review recent modelling advances accounting for this effect and validation in computational experiments. We show how this framework may be useful in capturing the complicated segregation phenomenology that emerges for dense sheared flows of particles different in both size and density.https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/kona/33/0/33_2016022/_html/-char/ensegregationmixingdem simulationsmixture model
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kimberly M. Hill
Yi Fan
spellingShingle Kimberly M. Hill
Yi Fan
Granular Temperature and Segregation in Dense Sheared Particulate Mixtures
KONA Powder and Particle Journal
segregation
mixing
dem simulations
mixture model
author_facet Kimberly M. Hill
Yi Fan
author_sort Kimberly M. Hill
title Granular Temperature and Segregation in Dense Sheared Particulate Mixtures
title_short Granular Temperature and Segregation in Dense Sheared Particulate Mixtures
title_full Granular Temperature and Segregation in Dense Sheared Particulate Mixtures
title_fullStr Granular Temperature and Segregation in Dense Sheared Particulate Mixtures
title_full_unstemmed Granular Temperature and Segregation in Dense Sheared Particulate Mixtures
title_sort granular temperature and segregation in dense sheared particulate mixtures
publisher Hosokawa Powder Technology Foundation
series KONA Powder and Particle Journal
issn 0288-4534
2187-5537
publishDate 2016-02-01
description In gravity-driven flows of different-sized (same density) particles, it is well known that larger particles tend to segregate upward (toward the free surface), and the smaller particles downward in the direction of gravity. Alternatively, when the particles are of the same size but different density, lighter particles tend to segregate upward and heavier particles, downward. When particles differ in both size and density, true of most mixtures of interest in industry and nature, the details are complicated and no rule based on gravity alone has captured the segregation behaviours. Gradients of granular temperature and kinetic stress (i.e., energy and stress associated with velocity fluctuations) offer alternative segregation driving forces, but have, until recently, been discounted as these dynamics are relatively small in dense flows. Recently, gradients in kinetic stress have been shown to play a significant role in segregating densely sheared particle mixtures, even where the kinetic stress is a relatively small percentage of the total stress. We review recent modelling advances accounting for this effect and validation in computational experiments. We show how this framework may be useful in capturing the complicated segregation phenomenology that emerges for dense sheared flows of particles different in both size and density.
topic segregation
mixing
dem simulations
mixture model
url https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/kona/33/0/33_2016022/_html/-char/en
work_keys_str_mv AT kimberlymhill granulartemperatureandsegregationindenseshearedparticulatemixtures
AT yifan granulartemperatureandsegregationindenseshearedparticulatemixtures
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