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Fluidization by lift of 300 circular particles in plane Poiseuille flow by direct numerical simulation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2001

HYOUNG G. CHOI
Affiliation:
Department of Aerospace Engineering and Mechanics, 107 Akerman Hall, 110 Union Street SE, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA Present address: BK21, Mechanical Engineering Research Division, Seoul National University, Seoul 151–742, Korea.
DANIEL D. JOSEPH
Affiliation:
Department of Aerospace Engineering and Mechanics, 107 Akerman Hall, 110 Union Street SE, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA
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Abstract

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We study the transport of a slurry of heavier-than-liquid circular particles in a plane pressure-driven flow in a direct simulation. The flow is calculated in a periodic domain containing 300 circular particles. The study leads to the concept of fluidization by lift in which all the particles are suspended by lift forces against gravity perpendicular to the flow. The study is framed as an initial-value problem in which a closely packed cubic array of particles resting on the bottom of the channel is lifted into suspension. All the details of the flow are resolved numerically without model assumptions. The fluidization of circular particles first involves bed inflation in which liquid is driven into the bed by high pressure at the front and low pressure at the back of each circle in the top row. This kind of bed inflation occurs even at very low Reynolds numbers but it takes more time for the bed to inflate as the Reynolds number is reduced. It appears that the bed will not inflate if the shear Reynolds number is below the critical value for single particle lift-off. The flows with a single particle are completely determined by a shear Reynolds number and a gravity parameter when the density ratio and aspect ratio parameters are specified. In the multi-particle case, the volume fraction and distribution also matters. The transition to a fully fluidized slurry by waves is discussed.

An analytical model of the steady motion of a single particle dragged forward in a Poiseuille flow is derived and compared with a simulation. The undisturbed fluid velocity is always larger than the particle velocity, producing a fluid hold-up. The effect of the hold-up in the many particle case is to greatly reduce the velocity of the mixture which may be described by a two-fluid model in which the solid laden mixture is regarded as a second fluid with effective properties.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2001 Cambridge University Press