Transient behavior and steady-state rheology of dense frictional suspensions in pressure-driven channel flow

Journal Article (2024)
Author(s)

W. Peerbooms (TU Delft - Multi Phase Systems)

A.E.D.M. van der Heijden (TNO, TU Delft - Complex Fluid Processing)

WP Breugem (TU Delft - Multi Phase Systems)

Research Group
Multi Phase Systems
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00707-024-04106-7
More Info
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Publication Year
2024
Language
English
Research Group
Multi Phase Systems
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Abstract

Results from particle-resolved Direct numerical simulations are presented for dense suspensions of frictional non-colloidal spheres in viscous pressure-driven channel flow. The bulk solid volume fraction varies between ϕb=0.2 and 0.6, and the Coulomb friction coefficient is either μc=0 or 0.5. The main objectives are to unravel the influence of (1) ϕb and μc on the flow development time and of (2) heterogeneous shear on the steady-state suspension rheology. Starting from an initially homogeneous distribution, the particles show shear-induced migration toward the core until equilibrium is reached. The flow development time decays exponentially with increasing ϕbR, where ΦR is a friction-dependent reference bulk concentration beyond which particle contacts cause a rapid increase in the particle stress. The steady-state rheology is studied by means of the ‘viscous’ and ‘frictional’ rheology frameworks. Excluding the central core and wall regions, the data for the local relative suspension viscosity collapse onto a single curve as function of the normalized local concentration ϕ¯/ϕm, where ϕm is the friction-dependent maximum flowable packing fraction. The frictional rheology shows ‘subyielding’ at low viscous number Iv in the core region, where the macroscopic friction coefficient μ drops below the minimal value found for homogeneous shear flows. A modified frictional rheology model is presented that captures subyielding. Finally, a model is presented for ϕ¯/ϕmp as function of Iv, where ϕmp is a modified maximum flowable packing fraction. It captures both ‘overcompaction’ in the core beyond ϕm at high ϕb and maximum core concentrations below ϕm at lower ϕb.