Average outpouring velocity and flow rate of grains discharged from a tilted quasi-2D silo
Ryan Kozlowski, J. Carter Luketich, Elijah Oshatz, Douglas J. Durian, Luis A. Pugnaloni

TL;DR
This study experimentally examines how the tilt angle of a quasi-2D silo affects grain flow rate, outpouring velocity, and packing fraction, proposing a model that incorporates these factors to better understand granular discharge.
Contribution
It introduces a new model linking tilt angle to flow dynamics in a quasi-2D silo, extending previous 3D system analyses.
Findings
Flow rate depends on tilt angle and stagnant zones.
Proposed model aligns with experimental data.
Outpouring velocity varies with orifice and stagnant zone angles.
Abstract
The flow of granular materials through constricted openings is important in many natural and industrial processes. These complex flows - featuring dense, dissipative flow in the bulk but low-dissipation, low density outpouring in the vicinity of the orifice - have long been characterized empirically by the Beverloo rule and, recently, modeled successfully using energy balance. The dependence of flow rate on the silo's angle with respect to gravity, however, is not captured by current models. We experimentally investigate the role of tilt angle in this work using a quasi-2D monolayer of grains in a silo. We measure mass flow rate, the average exit velocities of grains, and the packing fraction along the orifice with varying tilt angles. We propose a model that describes our results (and earlier findings with 3D systems [H. G. Sheldon and D. J. Durian, Granul. Matter 12, 579 (2010)]) by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGranular flow and fluidized beds · Landslides and related hazards · Soil and Unsaturated Flow
