Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Unexpected segregation patterns in high speed granular flows

View through CrossRef
<p align="JUSTIFY">Classically, for free surface flows of binary granular mixture, large particles migrate at the top of the flow while small ones percolate to the bottom. The key mechanisms at the origin of this segregation behavior have been identified as a combination of squeeze expulsion and kinetic sieving (Savage & Lun J. Fluid Mech. 1988). In this case, the segregation process is governed by the gravity. We <span>discovered</span> here by means of numerical simulations a new segregation pattern in high speed granular flows where size segregation is driven mostly by granular temperature gradients rather than gravity, which highlight the complexity of providing a complete description of segregation processes.</p><p align="JUSTIFY">High speed granular flows are obtained by means of discrete numerical simulations (DEM) in a confined geometry with lateral frictional side-walls. Recently, Brodu et al. (Phys. Rev. E 2013, J. Fluid Mech. 2015) highlighted that this confined geometry allows to produce steady and fully-developed flows at relatively high angles of inclination, including a rich and broad variety of new regimes. In particular, they showed the existence of supported regimes, characterized by a dense and cold (in terms of granular temperature) core floating over a dilute and highly agitated layer of grains, accompanied with longitudinal convection rolls.</p><p align="JUSTIFY">We performed extensive numerical simulations within this geometry with binary mixture of spheres with a given size ratio of 2. We analyzed segregation patterns of steady and fully-developed flows for inclination angles ranging from 18° to 50° and various mixture proportions of large particles ranging from 0 to 100%. We evidenced a new segregation pattern that emerge in the supported flow regimes: large particles no longer accumulate in the upper layers of the flow but are trapped in the dense core and localized at the center of the convection rolls. The strong temperature gradients that develop between the dense core and the surrounding dilute layer seem to govern the segregation mechanism. The accumulation of large particles in the dense core, which is the fastest region of the flow, also tends to enhance the total mass flux in comparison with similar mono-disperse flows.</p>
Title: Unexpected segregation patterns in high speed granular flows
Description:
<p align="JUSTIFY">Classically, for free surface flows of binary granular mixture, large particles migrate at the top of the flow while small ones percolate to the bottom.
The key mechanisms at the origin of this segregation behavior have been identified as a combination of squeeze expulsion and kinetic sieving (Savage & Lun J.
Fluid Mech.
1988).
In this case, the segregation process is governed by the gravity.
We <span>discovered</span> here by means of numerical simulations a new segregation pattern in high speed granular flows where size segregation is driven mostly by granular temperature gradients rather than gravity, which highlight the complexity of providing a complete description of segregation processes.
</p><p align="JUSTIFY">High speed granular flows are obtained by means of discrete numerical simulations (DEM) in a confined geometry with lateral frictional side-walls.
Recently, Brodu et al.
(Phys.
Rev.
E 2013, J.
Fluid Mech.
2015) highlighted that this confined geometry allows to produce steady and fully-developed flows at relatively high angles of inclination, including a rich and broad variety of new regimes.
In particular, they showed the existence of supported regimes, characterized by a dense and cold (in terms of granular temperature) core floating over a dilute and highly agitated layer of grains, accompanied with longitudinal convection rolls.
</p><p align="JUSTIFY">We performed extensive numerical simulations within this geometry with binary mixture of spheres with a given size ratio of 2.
We analyzed segregation patterns of steady and fully-developed flows for inclination angles ranging from 18° to 50° and various mixture proportions of large particles ranging from 0 to 100%.
We evidenced a new segregation pattern that emerge in the supported flow regimes: large particles no longer accumulate in the upper layers of the flow but are trapped in the dense core and localized at the center of the convection rolls.
The strong temperature gradients that develop between the dense core and the surrounding dilute layer seem to govern the segregation mechanism.
The accumulation of large particles in the dense core, which is the fastest region of the flow, also tends to enhance the total mass flux in comparison with similar mono-disperse flows.
</p>.

Related Results

Finite-Size Effects in Geophysical Granular Flow from a Nonlocal Rheology Perspective
Finite-Size Effects in Geophysical Granular Flow from a Nonlocal Rheology Perspective
Geophysical granular flow is ubiquitous in nature and plays a crucial role in shaping the landscape (hillslope creep, riverbed evolution) and causing geohazards (landslide, debris ...
Late Amazonian lateral lava flows coeval with caldera eruptions at Arsia Mons
Late Amazonian lateral lava flows coeval with caldera eruptions at Arsia Mons
Introduction: The Tharsis dome is the main volcanic province on Mars. Being the locus of volcanism since at least the lower Hesperian, the age of emplacement and succession of its ...
Detailed stratigraphy of the N 2Grande Ronde Basalt, Columbia River Basalt Group, in the central Columbia Plateau
Detailed stratigraphy of the N 2Grande Ronde Basalt, Columbia River Basalt Group, in the central Columbia Plateau
Stratigraphy of individual basalt flows in the N 2magnetostratigraphic unit of the Grande Ronde Basalt (GRB) within the central Columbia Plateau has been developed using data from ...
Volatile Ice Presence Analysis through Mass Wasting Events Mapping in Lunar Permanently Shadowed Regions
Volatile Ice Presence Analysis through Mass Wasting Events Mapping in Lunar Permanently Shadowed Regions
Mass wasting events on the Moon have been documented since the Apollo era and are distributed across its surface. On Earth, the morphology and runout distance of landslides, partic...
Experimental segregation profiles in bubbling gas‐fluidized beds
Experimental segregation profiles in bubbling gas‐fluidized beds
AbstractSpecies segregation measurements were performed in a fluidized bed composed of a binary, Geldart B mixture. Three system types were explored: size segregation, density segr...
Unified constitutive model for granular-fluid mixture in quasi-static and dense flow regimes
Unified constitutive model for granular-fluid mixture in quasi-static and dense flow regimes
Most granular materials encountered in nature and industry lie either in the quasi-static regime or the intermediate dense flow regime. Debris materials are a typical granular mate...
Diversifying but Not Integrating: Entropic Measures of Local Segregation
Diversifying but Not Integrating: Entropic Measures of Local Segregation
Scholars of segregation have struggled to adapt indices designed to model two‐group segregation for cities with large populations drawn from more than two racial/ethnic groups. Con...

Back to Top