New Journal of Physics (Jan 2021)

Flow in an hourglass: particle friction and stiffness matter

  • Tivadar Pongó,
  • Viktória Stiga,
  • János Török,
  • Sára Lévay,
  • Balázs Szabó,
  • Ralf Stannarius,
  • Raúl Cruz Hidalgo,
  • Tamás Börzsönyi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/abddf5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 2
p. 023001

Abstract

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Granular flow out of a silo is studied experimentally and numerically. The time evolution of the discharge rate as well as the normal force (apparent weight) at the bottom of the container is monitored. We show that particle stiffness has a strong effect on the qualitative features of silo discharge. For deformable grains with a Young modulus of about Y _m ≈ 40 kPa in a silo with basal pressure of the order of 4 kPa, lowering the friction coefficient leads to a gradual change in the discharge curve: the flow rate becomes filling height dependent, it decreases during the discharge process. For hard grains with a Young modulus of about Y _m ≈ 500 MPa the flow rate is much less sensitive to the value of the friction coefficient. Using DEM data combined with a coarse-graining methodology allows us to compute all the relevant macroscopic fields, namely, linear momentum, density and stress tensors. The observed difference in the discharge in the low friction limit is connected to a strong difference in the pressure field: while for hard grains Janssen-screening is effective, leading to high vertical stress near the silo wall and small pressure above the orifice region, for deformable grains the pressure above the orifice is larger and gradually decreases during the discharge process. We have analyzed the momentum balance in the region of the orifice (near the location of the outlet) for the case of soft particles with low friction coefficient, and proposed a phenomenological formulation that predicts the linear decrease of the flow rate with decreasing filling height.

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