Bifurcations and dynamics in inertial focusing of particles in curved rectangular ducts
Rahil N. Valani, Brendan Harding, Yvonne M. Stokes

TL;DR
This paper investigates the complex bifurcations and focusing dynamics of neutrally buoyant particles in curved rectangular ducts, revealing how system parameters influence equilibrium positions and transient behaviors relevant for particle separation technologies.
Contribution
It provides a detailed numerical analysis of particle equilibrium bifurcations and focusing dynamics in curved ducts, extending previous models to include parameter effects.
Findings
Bifurcation patterns depend on particle size, duct bend radius, and aspect ratio.
Transient focusing dynamics are significantly affected by initial particle position.
Multiple stable and unstable equilibria are identified under various conditions.
Abstract
Particles suspended in fluid flow through a curved duct focus to stable equilibrium positions in the duct cross-section due to the balance of two dominant forces: (i) inertial lift force - arising from the inertia of the fluid, and (ii) secondary drag force - resulting from cross-sectional vortices induced by the curvature of the duct. Such particle focusing is exploited in various medical and industrial technologies aimed at separating particles by size. Using the theoretical model developed by Harding et al.~[7], we numerically investigate the dynamics of neutrally buoyant particles in fluid flow through curved ducts with rectangular cross-sections at low flow rates. We explore the rich bifurcations that take place in the particle equilibria as a function of three system parameters - particle size, duct bend radius and aspect ratio of the cross-section. We also explore the transient…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Dynamics in Fluid Flows · Granular flow and fluidized beds · Microfluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies
