The dynamics of dense particles in vertical channel flows: gravity, lift and particle clusters
Amir Esteghamatian, Tamer A. Zaki

TL;DR
This study investigates how dense particles behave in vertical channel flows with Newtonian and viscoelastic fluids, revealing effects of gravity, lift forces, clustering, and how viscoelasticity influences drag and particle distribution.
Contribution
It provides new insights into particle clustering, lift forces, and the impact of viscoelasticity on particle dynamics and drag in vertical flows.
Findings
Particles cluster near walls, increasing drag.
Magnus lift force significantly affects particle trajectories.
Viscoelastic fluids enhance particle migration and stress.
Abstract
The dynamics of dense finite-size particles in vertical channel flows of Newtonian and viscoelastic carrier fluids are examined using particle resolved simulations. Comparison to neutrally buoyant particles in the same configuration highlights the effect of settling. The particle volume fraction is , and a gravity field acts counter to the flow direction. Despite a modest density ratio (), qualitative changes arise due to the relative velocity between the particle and fluid phases. While dense particles are homogeneously distributed in the core of the channel, the mean concentration profile peaks in the near-wall region due to a competition between shear- and rotation-induced lift forces. These forces act in the cross-stream directions, and are analyzed by evaluating conditional averages along individual particle trajectories. The correlation between the angular and…
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