Hopper flows of dense suspensions: a 2D microfluidic model system
Lars Kool, Jules Tampier, Philippe Bourrianne, Anke Lindner

TL;DR
This study introduces a microfluidic 2D hopper system to experimentally analyze dense suspension flows, revealing constant discharge rates, Beverloo-like scaling under pressure, and clogging statistics similar to other systems.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel microfluidic setup for studying dense suspension flows in confined geometries, enabling controlled experiments on clogging and flow dynamics.
Findings
Discharges occur at a constant rate independent of particle and orifice sizes.
Discharge exhibits Beverloo-like scaling under pressure-controlled conditions.
Clogging statistics follow stochastic laws similar to other systems.
Abstract
Flows of particles through bottlenecks are ubiquitous in nature and industry, involving both dry granular materials and suspensions. However, practical limitations of conventional experimental setups hinder the full understanding of these flows in confined geometries. Here, we present a microfluidic setup to investigate experimentally the flow of dense suspensions in a two-dimensional hopper channel. Particles with controlled properties are in-situ fabricated with a photolithographic projection method and compacted at the channel constriction using a Quake valve. The setup is characterized by examining the flow of a dense suspension of hard, monodisperse disks through constrictions of varying widths. We demonstrate that the microfluidic hopper discharges particles at constant rate, resulting from the channel resistance being dominated by the presence of densely packed particles within…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRheology and Fluid Dynamics Studies · Lattice Boltzmann Simulation Studies · Fluid Dynamics and Heat Transfer
