Parabolic velocity profile causes drift of inertial prolate spheroids -- but gravity is stronger
Joar Bagge, Tomas Ros\'en, Fredrik Lundell, Anna-Karin Tornberg

TL;DR
This paper investigates how quadratic velocity profiles and particle inertia cause lateral drift of prolate spheroidal particles in shear flows, highlighting that gravity's effect is more significant in practical scenarios.
Contribution
It demonstrates that quadratic velocity terms combined with particle inertia induce lateral drift in elongated particles, a phenomenon previously overlooked in shear flow analysis.
Findings
Lateral drift is maximal when inertial and viscous forces are balanced.
Drift is negligible for extremely light or heavy particles.
Gravity dominates over inertial drift in practical applications.
Abstract
Motion of elongated particles in shear is studied. In applications where particles are much heavier than the carrying fluid, e.g. aerosols, the influence of particle inertia dominates the particle dynamics. Assuming that the particle only experiences a local linear velocity profile, its rotational and translational motion are independent. However, we show that quadratic terms of the local velocity profile combined with particle inertia cause a lateral drift of prolate spheroidal particles. We find that this drift is maximal when particle inertial forces are of the same order of magnitude as viscous forces, and that both extremely light and extremely heavy particles have negligible drift. In the non-inertial case, the particle rotates according to the local linear velocity profile, with each instantaneous orientation corresponding to a velocity that gives zero force on the particle. This…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Dynamics in Fluid Flows · Granular flow and fluidized beds · Aeolian processes and effects
