Role of particle volume fraction on particulate suspension droplet evolution, transition and Hysteresis
Kishorkumar Sarva

TL;DR
This study investigates how particle volume fraction affects the transition, hysteresis, and droplet characteristics in particulate suspension jets, revealing that higher fractions induce chaotic regimes and alter droplet formation dynamics.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the influence of particle volume fraction on transition behavior, hysteresis, and droplet size distribution in particulate suspension jets.
Findings
Transition to jetting occurs at lower flow rates with higher particle fractions.
Hysteresis loop widens as particle volume fraction increases.
Droplet size and pinchoff frequency decrease with higher particle volume fractions.
Abstract
We study the transitional dynamics of the non-Brownian particulate Newtonian liquid jet for different particle volume fractions (). We focus on the influence of particle volume fraction on the critical inflow velocity at which the dripping-jetting (i.e., dripping to jetting and jetting to dripping) transition occurs for the ratio of the nozzle diameter to the particle diameter (=20). The experiments were conducted by increasing (forward sweep) and decreasing (reverse sweep) the flow rate. These experiments were repeated for different volume fractions. We observe, with an increase in particle volume fraction, the transition from the dripping to the jetting regime occurs through a chaotic dripping regime. With an increase in the particle volume fraction, the jetting regime has occurred at early flow rates during dripping to jetting transition (in forward sweep), and the…
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