Particle flow rate in silos under rotational shear

D. Hernández-Delfin, T. Pongó, K. To, T. Börzsönyi, and R. C. Hidalgo
Phys. Rev. E 102, 042902 – Published 12 October 2020

Abstract

Very recently, To et al. have experimentally explored granular flow in a cylindrical silo, with a bottom wall that rotates horizontally with respect to the lateral wall [Phys. Rev. E 100, 012906 (2019)]. Here we numerically reproduce their experimental findings, in particular, the peculiar behavior of the mass flow rate Q as a function of the frequency of rotation f. Namely, we find that for small outlet diameters D the flow rate increased with f, while for larger D a nonmonotonic behavior is confirmed. Furthermore, using a coarse-graining technique, we compute the macroscopic density, momentum, and the stress tensor fields. These results show conclusively that changes in the discharge process are directly related to changes in the flow pattern from funnel flow to mass flow. Moreover, by decomposing the mass flux (linear momentum field) at the orifice into two main factors, macroscopic velocity and density fields, we obtain that the nonmonotonic behavior of the linear momentum is caused by density changes rather than by changes in the macroscopic velocity. In addition, by analyzing the spatial distribution of the kinetic stress, we find that for small orifices increasing rotational shear enhances the mean kinetic pressure pk and the system dilatancy. This reduces the stability of the arches, and, consequently, the volumetric flow rate increases monotonically. For large orifices, however, we detected that pk changes nonmonotonically, which might explain the nonmonotonic behavior of Q when varying the rotational shear.

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  • Received 21 July 2020
  • Accepted 22 September 2020

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.102.042902

©2020 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

  1. Research Areas
  1. Physical Systems
Fluid Dynamics

Authors & Affiliations

D. Hernández-Delfin1, T. Pongó1, K. To2, T. Börzsönyi3,*, and R. C. Hidalgo1,†

  • 1Departamento de Física y Matemática Aplicada, Universidad de Navarra, P.O. Box 31080, Navarra, Spain
  • 2Institute of Physics, Academia Sinica, P.O. Box 11529, Taipei, Taiwan R.O.C.
  • 3Institute for Solid State Physics and Optics, Wigner Research Centre for Physics, P.O. Box 49, H-1525 Budapest, Hungary

  • *borzsonyi.tamas@wigner.hu
  • raulcruz@unav.es

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Issue

Vol. 102, Iss. 4 — October 2020

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