Issue 17, 2015

Suspension flow: do particles act as mixers?

Abstract

Recently, Roht et al. [J. Contam. Hydrol., 2013, 145, 10–16] observed that the presence of suspended non-Brownian macroscopic particles decreased the dispersivity of a passive solute, for a pressure-driven flow in a narrow parallel-plate channel at low Reynolds numbers. This result contradicts the idea that the streamline distortion caused by the random diffusive motion of the particles increases the dispersion and mixing of the solute. Therefore, to estimate the influence of this motion on the dispersivity of the solute, and investigate the origin of the reported decrease, we experimentally studied the probability density function (pdf) of the particle velocities, and spatio-temporal correlations, in the same experimental configuration. We observed that, as the mean suspension velocity exceeds a critical value, the pdf of the streamwise velocity of the particles markedly changes from a symmetric distribution to an asymmetric one strongly skewed to high velocities and with a peak of the most probable velocity close to the maximum velocity. The latter observations and the analysis of the suspension microstructure indicate that the observed decrease in the dispersivity of the solute is due to particle migration to the mid-plane of the channel, and consequent flattening of the velocity profile. Moreover, we estimated the contribution of particle diffusive motion to the solute dispersivity to be three orders of magnitude smaller than the reported decrease, and thus negligible. Solute dispersion is then much more affected by how particles modify the flow velocity profile across the channel than by their random diffusive motion.

Graphical abstract: Suspension flow: do particles act as mixers?

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
31 Dec 2014
Accepted
11 Mar 2015
First published
11 Mar 2015

Soft Matter, 2015,11, 3367-3372

Author version available

Suspension flow: do particles act as mixers?

A. Boschan, M. A. Aguirre and G. Gauthier, Soft Matter, 2015, 11, 3367 DOI: 10.1039/C4SM02909G

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