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Experimental study of forces on freely moving spherical particles during resuspension into turbulent flow

•Freely moving spherical inertial particles and flow tracers tracked using 3D-PTV.•Particles trajectories obtained before, during and after lift-off events in an oscillating grid turbulent flow.•Force terms estimated using Maxey–Riley equation.•Dominant force during resuspension of freely moving par...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:International journal of multiphase flow 2017-01, Vol.88, p.167-178
Main Authors: Traugott, Hadar, Liberzon, Alex
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•Freely moving spherical inertial particles and flow tracers tracked using 3D-PTV.•Particles trajectories obtained before, during and after lift-off events in an oscillating grid turbulent flow.•Force terms estimated using Maxey–Riley equation.•Dominant force during resuspension of freely moving particles is lift and Basset force plays a key role before the lift-off. Turbulent resuspension, a process of lifting solid particles from the bottom by turbulent flow, is ubiquitous in environmental and industrial applications. The process is a sequence of events that starts with an incipient motion of the particle being dislodged from its place, continues as sliding or rolling on the surface, ending with the particle being detached from the surface and lifted up into the flow. We study the resuspension of solid spherical particles with the density comparable to that of the fluid, and the diameter comparable with the Kolmogorov length scale. Three-dimensional particle tracking velocimetry (3D-PTV) tracks particle motion during the lift-off events in an oscillating grid turbulent flow. We measure simultaneously the Lagrangian trajectories of both the particles freely moving along the bottom smooth wall and the surrounding flow tracers. Different force terms acting on particles were estimated based on particle motion and local flow parameters. The results show that: i) the lift force is dominant; ii) the drag force on freely moving particles is less relevant in this type of resuspension; iii) the Basset (history or viscous-unsteady) force is a non-negligible component and plays an important role before the lift-off event. Although we cannot estimate very accurately the magnitude of the force terms, we find that during the resuspension the dominant forces are 2−10 times the buoyancy force magnitude. The findings cannot be extrapolated to particles, which are much smaller than the Kolmogorov length scale, or much denser than the fluid. Nevertheless, the present findings can assist in modeling of the sediment transport, particle filtration, pneumatic conveying and mixing in bio-reactors.
ISSN:0301-9322
1879-3533
DOI:10.1016/j.ijmultiphaseflow.2016.10.003