Drag, diffusion and segregation in inertial granular flows

Robbie Bancroft, Christopher Johnson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Inter-species drag forces in granular flows play a central role in setting the speed and extent of segregation, a process that separates grains of different size or density. Here we study this drag force in detail, using a novel configuration of discrete element simulations that allows us to completely characterise the drag in inertial granular flows by studying it in a uniform environment. By applying opposing forces to grains in monodisperse and size bidisperse shear flows, we show that the strength of the drag force scales as I-7/4, where is the granular inertial number, and propose a model that explains this scaling by relating the strength of drag to grain velocity fluctuations. These findings suggest that much of the previously observed dependence of the segregation rate on the local shear rate and pressure in dense free-surface flows is due to variation in the strength of the inter-species drag, rather than the strength of forces that drive segregation.
Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Fluid Mechanics
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 12 Jun 2021

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