Suspension flow: do particles act as mixers?
A. Boschan, M.A.Aguirre, G. Gauthier

TL;DR
This study investigates how suspended particles influence solute dispersion in channel flow, revealing that particle migration alters flow profiles more significantly than their diffusive motion, which has minimal impact on mixing.
Contribution
The paper provides experimental evidence that particle migration, not diffusive motion, primarily reduces solute dispersivity by modifying the flow velocity profile.
Findings
Particle velocities become skewed at high suspension speeds.
Particle migration causes flattening of the velocity profile.
Diffusive motion of particles has negligible effect on dispersion.
Abstract
Recently, Roht et al. [J. Contam. Hydrol. 145, 10-16 (2013)] observed that the presence of suspended non-Brownian macroscopic particles decreased the dispersivity of a passive solute, for a pressure-driven flow in a narrow parallel-plates channel at low Reynolds number. This result contradicts the idea that the streamline distortion caused by the random diffusive motion of the particles increases the dispersion and mixing of the solute. Therefore, to estimate the influence of this motion on the dispersivity of the solute, and investigate the origin of the reported decrease, we experimentally studied the probability density functions (pdf) of the particle velocities, and spatio-temporal correlations, in the same experimental configuration. We observed that, as the mean suspension velocity exceeds a critical value, the pdf of the streamwise velocities of the particles markedly changes…
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