Velocity profile of granular flows inside silos and hoppers
Jaehyuk Choi, Arshad Kudrolli, and Martin Z. Bazant

TL;DR
This study experimentally investigates granular flow inside silos and hoppers, comparing measurements with existing models, revealing limitations of the Kinematic Model, and supporting the Spot Model for particle diffusion.
Contribution
The paper provides high-resolution measurements of granular flow, tests existing models against data, and discusses modifications to improve the understanding of flow dynamics.
Findings
Velocity profiles are smooth, lacking shock-like discontinuities.
The Kinematic Model accurately predicts near-orifice velocities but not far from it.
Diffusion length increases with height and hopper angle, contrary to assumptions.
Abstract
We measure the flow of granular materials inside a quasi-two dimensional silo as it drains and compare the data with some existing models. The particles inside the silo are imaged and tracked with unprecedented resolution in both space and time to obtain their velocity and diffusion properties. The data obtained by varying the orifice width and the hopper angle allows us to thoroughly test models of gravity driven flows inside these geometries. All of our measured velocity profiles are smooth and free of the shock-like discontinuities ("rupture zones") predicted by critical state soil mechanics. On the other hand, we find that the simple Kinematic Model accurately captures the mean velocity profile near the orifice, although it fails to describe the rapid transition to plug flow far away from the orifice. The measured diffusion length , the only free parameter in the model, is not…
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