Settling of cohesive sediment: particle-resolved simulations
B. Vowinckel, J. Withers, P. Luzzatto-Fegiz, and E. Meiburg

TL;DR
This paper introduces a particle-resolved simulation model for cohesive sediment settling, capturing the effects of cohesion on particle interactions and settling behavior, validated against experiments and showing up to 29% acceleration in settling rates.
Contribution
The paper develops a novel fully coupled simulation model for cohesive sediment that incorporates cohesive forces via a thin shell approach, validated with binary interactions and applied to large polydisperse systems.
Findings
Cohesive forces cause particles to settle faster, up to 29% acceleration.
Particles of different sizes tend to align vertically due to cohesion.
The model reproduces experimental observations of sediment settling behaviors.
Abstract
We develop a physical and computational model for performing fully coupled, particle-resolved Direct Numerical Simulations of cohesive sediment, based on the Immersed Boundary Method. The model distributes the cohesive forces over a thin shell surrounding each particle, thereby allowing for the spatial and temporal resolution of the cohesive forces during particle-particle interactions. The influence of the cohesive forces is captured by a single dimensionless parameter in the form of a cohesion number, which represents the ratio of cohesive and gravitational forces acting on a particle. We test and validate the cohesive force model for binary particle interactions in the Drafting-Kissing-Tumbling (DKT) configuration. The DKT simulations demonstrate that cohesive particle pairs settle in a preferred orientation, with particles of very different sizes preferentially aligning themselves…
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