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Modeling of Granular Flows

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Title: Modeling of Granular Flows


1
Modeling of Granular Flows
  • Harald Laux
  • SINTEF Materials Technology
  • Multiphase Flow Modeling Lecture Series DIO 1013

2
Overview
  • Multiphase flow models and examples
  • What is a granular flow?
  • Granular flow examples
  • Modeling of granular flows
  • Macroscopic equations
  • Important concepts
  • Collision dynamics
  • Rheology
  • Boundary conditions
  • Large scale structures

3
Multiphase flow models (in CFD)
Percentage of projects
Free surface flow models (e.g. VOF)
Mixture model
0
Standard multi-fluid model
Granular multi-fluid model
11
DEM
39
21
4
0
Lagrangian particle tracking
4
Example Free surface model
VOF model of plunging steel jet
Laux et al (2000).
5
Example Lagrangian particle tracking
Berg et al. (1999).
6
Example Granular multi-fluid model
Sedimentation of spherical mono-sized polymer
particles in water
Laux H. (1998), Ph.D. Thesis NTH 199871.
7
Example Standard multi-fluid model
Transparent model alloy NH4CL (70wt) H2O
solution
Beckermann and Wang (1996).
8
What is a granular flow?
Simple It is the flow of a granular material!
But then What is a granular material?
Granular material Mixture made up of discrete
solid particles which are dispersed in a fluid
phase.
During flow, the particles come into contact or
near contact with each other and an essential
feature of the granular flow is the interaction
between the solid particles.
Strictly In a granular flow the particle
concentration is high.
9
Granular flows I (examples)
  • Flow of
  • Sand
  • Ore
  • Metal powders
  • Alloy particles
  • Free-floating dendrites
  • Food particles
  • Catalytic particles
  • Granular snow
  • Pack ice (2D)
  • Dynamics of unidirectional freeway traffic
  • a.o.
  • Flow in form of
  • Dry grains
  • Powders
  • Suspensions
  • Slurries
  • Pastes

10
Typical granular flows II (examples)
  • Cold gas-fluidized bubbling bed (dense B
    powder)

Laux H. (1998), Ph.D. Thesis NTH 199871.
Evolution of solids volume fraction over 5 s real
time
11
Typical granular flows III (examples)
  • Flow of dry sand in an hourglass (dense
    interparticle friction)

Granular multi-fluid model
Laux H. (1998), Ph.D. Thesis NTH 199871.
Discrete Element Method
Curtesy of Leif Rune Hellevik
12
Typical granular flows IV (examples)
  • Ozone decomposition in a 0.25 m I.D. riser
    (dilute - reactive gas)

Samuelsberg A.E. (1994), Ph.D. Thesis NTH 199424.
Solids volume fraction
  • Pyrolysis of biomass in bubbling fluidized bed
    reactor (dense - reactive particles)

gt 0.25
Lathouwers D. and J. Bellan (2001), Int. J.
Multiphase Flow, 27, 2155-2187.
lt 0.15
13
Modeling of granular flows I - Volume
averaging
  • Traditional method to derive the multi-fluid
    model
  • Suitable for simulation of entire range of
    granular flows
  • Closure completely empirical
  • For granular multi-fluid model
  • Derive only the governing equations for the fluid
    phase

14
Modeling of granular flows II - Granular
kinetic theory
  • Relatively new theory (since 1980) to derive the
    governing equations for dispersed phases in a
    granular flow
  • Closure considerably less empirical
  • Granular multi-fluid model consists of
  • Granular phase(s) conservation equations
  • Fluid phase conservation equations
  • Granular theory
  • Most work done on dilute and dense gas-solid
    particle flows

15
Macroscopic equationsfor isothermal flow of
mono-sized particles
16
Mass conservation
No difference in equations for standard and
granular multi-fluid model
Volume fraction
17
Standard multi-fluid model
Momentum conservation
Momentum transfer with suspending fluid phase
Stress tensor
Dynamic viscosity
18
Granular multi-fluid model
Momentum conservation
Momentum transfer with suspending fluid phase
Particle pressure
Stress tensor
Dynamic viscosity
19
Granular multi-fluid model Granular
temperature
Dissipation of ? due to suspending fluid phase
Production of ?
Conduction
Dissipation of ?
20
Granular transport coefficients
  • Functions of volume fraction, granular
    temperature, particle diameter, particle density,
    maximum packing fraction and restitution
    coefficient
  • Dynamic viscosity
  • Bulk viscosity
  • Conductivity
  • All can be rigorously derived from kinetic
    theory.

Example
Properties which can be measured!
21
Granular pressure I
Granular pressure Equation-of-state of
particulate continuum
22
Granular pressure II
  • Physical significance
  • Dispersive force
  • Limits compression in a arbitrary volume to
    maximum allowed packing fraction

Measured for example for gas-solid flow by
Campbell and Wang (1990) and for liquid-solid
flow by Zenit et al. (1997)
23
Harald Laux Show derivation at borad
Granular temperature
  • One of the main characteristics of granular
    flows
  • Even if particle cloud moves at a macroscopic
    velocity, the velocity single particles
    fluctuates randomly about this macroscopic
    velocity

Microscopic velocities
Local instantaneous macroscopic velocity
Granular temperature is the kinetic energy
associated with the random velocity fluctuations
due to collisions between particles
Important Do not confuse with turbulence!
24
Dissipation of granular temperature
  • Dissipation due to inelasticity of
    particle-to-particle collisions (interactions)
  • Function of volume fraction, granular
    temperature, particle diameter, particle density,
    maximum packing fraction and restitution
    coefficient

25
Collision dynamics I
  • During flow, the particles come into contact or
    near contact with each other
  • Particles interact
  • Kinetic theory of granular flows assumes
  • 1) Instantaneous binary collisions
  • 2) Energy dissipation due to inelasticity of
    collisions

Restitution coefficient, e
26
Collision dynamics II
  • Restitution coefficient

Relative velocity after collision
gt Momentum is conserved
gt Energy is dissipated
27
Transport mechanisms in granular flows
  • (1) Kinetic or streaming mode
  • (2) Collisional mode
  • (3) Frictional mode
  • (4) Radiated mode

Mass transfer (1)
Momentum transfer (1) - (4)
Energy transfer (1), (3?)
Liquid-particle flow
28
Granular multi-fluid model
Flow of dry sand in an hourglass
Spontaneous bubbling bed
Sedimentation problem
29
Rheology
Harald Laux An der Tafel herleiten Pxy(du/dy)
gamma
  • Bagnolds (1954) classical shear cell
    experiments
  • Large shear rates
  • Small shear rates

Grain inertia regime
It can be shown using granular theory that for
dense flow
Macro-viscous regime
30
Harald Laux Constant normal force gt must expand
as granular temperature increases
Rheology simple approach
If particles are interlocked and maintain long
lasting frictional contacts then shear will first
move particles above a critical yield stress.
If frictional contacts are less important, e.g.,
as for perfectly spherical and smooth particles,
the particle bed will expand when sheared and
produce granular temperature.
31
Rheology simple approach
Coulomb friction Slip if critical shear stress of
any slip plane is exceeded
Shear stress during slipping
Slip planes
32
Rheology simple approach
Dynamic viscosity
   
Mixing length model
Mixing length average particle spacing
33
Rheology simple approach
At high shear rates both viscosity and shear
stress increase gt Shear thickening rheology
34
Boundary conditions
  • Particle velocity at walls
  • Particles slip at wall
  • Partial-slip boundary condition
  • Granular flux at walls
  • Dissipative particle-to-wall collisions
  • Wall shear produces granular temperature
  • Heat flux through wall is balanced by
    difference in dissipation and production at walls

35
Large scale structures in granular flows
Stable large scale structures caused by volume
fraction fluctuations (stability analysis of
granular flow equations e.g. by Savage (1992)
Cluster in a dilute riser flow
Spontaneous formation of gas bubbles in a dense
fluidized bed
Dilute wall region due to production of ? at wall
36
Standard multi-fluid model versus Granular
multi-fluid model
  • Granular multi-fluid model
  • Granular pressure gradient
  • Dynamic transport coefficients, e.g.
    µf(?d,?,..)
  • Compressible granular continuum
  • Less empirical input
  • Mainly derived for gas-solid flows
  • Standard multi-fluid model
  • All transport coefficients require empirical
    input
  • More flexible easily adopted to new types of
    granular flows if transport coefficients can be
    measured
  • Even a force corresponding the granular pressure
    gradient can be introduced (G-modulus)

37
Are granular flow models also applicable to
droplet flow and bubbly flow?
E.g. Droplet flow. Is the viscosity of the
droplet material the correct viscosity to use in
the shear stress tensor of the droplet phase?
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