Suspension flows past bluff bodies: Investigation in a microfluidic environment
Shahab Shojaei-Zadeh, Jeffrey F. Morris

TL;DR
This study uses microfluidic experiments to analyze how noncolloidal particles behave when flowing past bluff bodies, revealing steady-state particle distributions and wake depletion phenomena at moderate Reynolds numbers.
Contribution
It provides new insights into suspension flow behavior past bluff bodies in microfluidic environments, highlighting steady-state wake depletion and particle recirculation dynamics.
Findings
Particles are depleted in the wake region of obstacles.
Wake regions can be completely particle-free or contain recirculating particles.
Particle distributions in wakes are steady-state and recover after disturbance.
Abstract
This sequence of fluid dynamics videos illustrates the behavior of a suspension of noncolloidal particles flowing past various bluff body obstacles within a microfluidic device. The polystyrene particles, of 7 {\mu}m diameter and volume fraction of 8.4%, are carefully made neutrally buoyant with the suspending liquid composed of a mixture of water and a small fraction of glycerol. The channel depth is 60 {\mu}m and the typical length of the obstacles normal to the flow direction is 200 {\mu}m. The flow rate is varied to generate Reynolds numbers based on the scale of the obstacle in the approximate range 60 < Re < 500; the narrow dimension in the depth direction suppresses onset of unsteadiness and vortex shedding, so that the flows studied are found to be steady (aside from particle-scale fluctuations). Particles are observed to be depleted in the wake region of the obstacle. In…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Vibration Analysis · Lattice Boltzmann Simulation Studies
