Conditional stability of particle alignment in finite-Reynolds-number channel flow
Anupam Gupta, Pascale Magaud, Christine Lafforgue, Micheline Abbas

TL;DR
This study uses numerical simulations to analyze how neutrally buoyant particles in finite-Reynolds-number channel flow align in the streamwise direction, revealing stability limits based on flow and particle parameters.
Contribution
The paper introduces a numerical investigation of particle alignment stability in channel flow, highlighting the dependence on flow inertia, particle size, and confinement, with validation against experimental data.
Findings
Stable particle trains are limited in length depending on Reynolds number and confinement.
Numerical results agree with experimental observations of particle spacing.
The flow around particles shows stable vortices between aligned particles.
Abstract
Finite-size neutrally buoyant particles in a channel flow are known to accumulate at specific equilibrium positions or spots in the channel cross-section if the flow inertia is finite at the particle scale. Experiments in different conduit geometries have shown that while reaching equilibrium locations, particles tend also to align regularly in the streamwise direction. In this paper, the Force Coupling Method was used to numerically investigate the inertia-induced particle alignment, using square channel geometry. The method was first shown to be suitable to capture the quasi-steady lift force that leads to particle cross-streamline migration in channel flow. Then the particle alignment in the flow direction was investigated by calculating the particle relative trajectories as a function of flow inertia and of the ratio between the particle size and channel hydraulic diameter. The flow…
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