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Investigating multi-directional inhomogeneous granular suspensions

Granular flows in rotating drums find many applications in industry, even though the dynamics of their granular media is not fully understood. Several models of granular flow and granular suspensions (where a viscous fluid is present in the voids between the granular particles) have been proposed in...

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Main Author: De Klerk, David
Other Authors: Govender Indresan
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Physics 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author De Klerk, David
author2 Govender Indresan
author_browse De Klerk, David
Govender Indresan
author_facet Govender Indresan
De Klerk, David
author_sort De Klerk, David
collection Thesis
description Granular flows in rotating drums find many applications in industry, even though the dynamics of their granular media is not fully understood. Several models of granular flow and granular suspensions (where a viscous fluid is present in the voids between the granular particles) have been proposed in the last decade and a half. These models are unified in the way that dimensional analysis is employed to describe bulk properties of the flow in terms of a number of dimensionless parameters. However, applicability to rotating drums has not been demonstrated for many of these models. Furthermore, most studies rely on numerical simulations or experiments of slowly rotating drums that are not easily identified with industrial applications that operate in higher Froude regimes. This thesis presents a series of Positron Emission Particle Tracking (PEPT) experiments and Discrete Element Method (DEM) simulations of rotating drums with a viscous fluid. The three aims of the thesis are, to investigate the use of the Ergodic hypothesis when analysing PEPT data, to test the use of the lubrication approximation in the DEM simulations and to compare results from rotating drums to the latest models of granular rheology and granular suspensions. Two sets of PEPT experiments were carried out with a drum (radius R = 230 mm and length L = 200 mm) which was forced to rotate around its axis. The first series of experiments, used to investigate the use of the ergodic hypothesis, used a fixed rotation rate (ω = 0.6ωc = 0.6 p g/R) and three different particle sizes (5 mm, 8 mm and 10 mm). A radio labelled tracer particle’s location was recorded for 10 h for each of the three particle sizes. The second series of experiments, intended to test rheology models of dense suspensions and the use of the lubrication approximation in DEM, used 10 mm diameter glass spheres and glycerol/water mixtures in a drum. The second configuration was simulated with DEM using the Hertz-Mindlen contact model for particle-particle interactions. The effect of a viscous force between particles in close proximity to each other was captured by a lubrication approximation. Particle level data from experiments and simulations are transformed to smooth fields by a coarsegraining method which is described in detail. The ergodic assumption (which states that time averages of the PEPT tracer is equivalent to the ensemble average and central to analysing PEPT data) is evaluated using the first series of experiments. It was found that the average velocity can be established after 15 min tracking time, however the solids fraction still shows under sampled regions after tracking for 3 h. Several techniques were used to investigate this, including as Poincaré maps and the global mixing index. A variation on the averaging technique is shown to account for under sampled regions in the solids fraction.
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language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/31229 Investigating multi-directional inhomogeneous granular suspensions De Klerk, David Govender Indresan Mainza, Aubrey physics Granular flows in rotating drums find many applications in industry, even though the dynamics of their granular media is not fully understood. Several models of granular flow and granular suspensions (where a viscous fluid is present in the voids between the granular particles) have been proposed in the last decade and a half. These models are unified in the way that dimensional analysis is employed to describe bulk properties of the flow in terms of a number of dimensionless parameters. However, applicability to rotating drums has not been demonstrated for many of these models. Furthermore, most studies rely on numerical simulations or experiments of slowly rotating drums that are not easily identified with industrial applications that operate in higher Froude regimes. This thesis presents a series of Positron Emission Particle Tracking (PEPT) experiments and Discrete Element Method (DEM) simulations of rotating drums with a viscous fluid. The three aims of the thesis are, to investigate the use of the Ergodic hypothesis when analysing PEPT data, to test the use of the lubrication approximation in the DEM simulations and to compare results from rotating drums to the latest models of granular rheology and granular suspensions. Two sets of PEPT experiments were carried out with a drum (radius R = 230 mm and length L = 200 mm) which was forced to rotate around its axis. The first series of experiments, used to investigate the use of the ergodic hypothesis, used a fixed rotation rate (ω = 0.6ωc = 0.6 p g/R) and three different particle sizes (5 mm, 8 mm and 10 mm). A radio labelled tracer particle’s location was recorded for 10 h for each of the three particle sizes. The second series of experiments, intended to test rheology models of dense suspensions and the use of the lubrication approximation in DEM, used 10 mm diameter glass spheres and glycerol/water mixtures in a drum. The second configuration was simulated with DEM using the Hertz-Mindlen contact model for particle-particle interactions. The effect of a viscous force between particles in close proximity to each other was captured by a lubrication approximation. Particle level data from experiments and simulations are transformed to smooth fields by a coarsegraining method which is described in detail. The ergodic assumption (which states that time averages of the PEPT tracer is equivalent to the ensemble average and central to analysing PEPT data) is evaluated using the first series of experiments. It was found that the average velocity can be established after 15 min tracking time, however the solids fraction still shows under sampled regions after tracking for 3 h. Several techniques were used to investigate this, including as Poincaré maps and the global mixing index. A variation on the averaging technique is shown to account for under sampled regions in the solids fraction. 2020-02-21T13:32:33Z 2020-02-21T13:32:33Z 2019 2020-02-21T07:41:09Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31229 eng application/pdf Department of Physics Faculty of Science
spellingShingle physics
De Klerk, David
Investigating multi-directional inhomogeneous granular suspensions
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Investigating multi-directional inhomogeneous granular suspensions
title_full Investigating multi-directional inhomogeneous granular suspensions
title_fullStr Investigating multi-directional inhomogeneous granular suspensions
title_full_unstemmed Investigating multi-directional inhomogeneous granular suspensions
title_short Investigating multi-directional inhomogeneous granular suspensions
title_sort investigating multi directional inhomogeneous granular suspensions
topic physics
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31229
work_keys_str_mv AT deklerkdavid investigatingmultidirectionalinhomogeneousgranularsuspensions