English

Clogging in constricted suspension flows

Fluid Dynamics 2018-02-14 v1 Soft Condensed Matter

Abstract

The flow of a charged-stabilized suspension through a single constricted channel is studied experimentally by tracking the particles individually. Surprisingly, the behavior is found to be qualitatively similar to that of inertial dry granular systems: For small values of the neck-to-particle size ratio (D/d<3), clogs form randomly as arches of particle span the constriction. The statistics of the clogging events are Poissonian as reported for granular systems and agree, for moderate particle volume fraction (ϕ20%\phi\approx20\%), with a simple stochastic model for the number of particles at the neck. For larger neck sizes (D/d>3), even at the largest ϕ\phi (60%\approx60\%) achievable in the experiments, an uninterrupted particle flow is observed, which resembles that of an hourglass. This particularly small value of D/d at the transition to a practically uninterrupted flow is attributed to the low effective friction between the particles, achieved by the particle's functionalization and lubrication.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1711.06119,
  title  = {Clogging in constricted suspension flows},
  author = {Alvaro Marin and Henri Lhuissier and Massimiliano Rossi and Christian J. Kaehler},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1711.06119},
  year   = {2018}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-22T22:48:15.913Z