Continuum modeling of flow and size-segregation in dense granular materials

 · Invited

Abstract

Dense granular systems that consist of particles of disparate size segregate based on size during flow, resulting in complex, coupled segregation and flow fields. In this talk, we study size-segregation phenomenology using discrete-element method (DEM) simulations of dense, bidisperse particles and propose a continuum model for coupled size-segregation and flow in dense, bidisperse granular systems. In our DEM simulations, we consider four flow geometries: (1) gravity-driven flow down a long vertical chute, (2) annular shear flow, (3) gravity-driven flow down a rough, inclined surface, and (4) planar shear flow in the presence of gravity - all while varying system parameters, such as the flow rate, system size, fraction of large/small grains, and grain-size ratio. Selected DEM simulation data inform continuum constitutive equations for the relative flux of large and small particles. The segregation model accounts for two driving forces - shear-strain-rate-gradients and pressure-gradients. When coupled with the nonlocal granular fluidity model - a nonlocal continuum model for dense granular flow - we show that both flow fields and segregation dynamics may be simultaneously captured using the coupled, continuum model.

*This work was supported by funds from NSF-CBET-1552556.

Presenters

  • David Henann

    • Brown University

Authors

  • David Henann

    • Brown University
  • Daren Liu

    • Brown University
  • Shihong Li

    • Brown University
  • Harkirat Singh

    • Brown University