Bulletin of the American Physical Society
74th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Fluid Dynamics
Volume 66, Number 17
Sunday–Tuesday, November 21–23, 2021; Phoenix Convention Center, Phoenix, Arizona
Session Q01: Suspensions: Rheology
8:00 AM–10:10 AM,
Tuesday, November 23, 2021
Room: North 120 AB
Chair: Rishabh More, Purdue University
Abstract: Q01.00008 : Rheology of mobile sediment beds sheared by viscous, pressure-driven flows *
9:31 AM–9:44 AM
Presenter:
Bernhard Vowinckel
(TU Braunschweig, Germany)
Authors:
Bernhard Vowinckel
(TU Braunschweig, Germany)
Edward Biegert
(University of California, Santa Barbara)
Eckart H Meiburg
(University of California, Santa Barbara)
Pascale Aussillous
(Aix Marseille Université, France)
Élisabeth Guazzelli
(Université de Paris, France)
We present a detailed comparison of the rheological behaviour of sheared sediment beds in a pressure-driven, straight channel configuration based on data that was generated by grain-resolved direct numerical simulations and the experimental measurements of Aussillous et al. (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 736, 2013, pp. 594-615). The highly-resolved simulation data allows to compute the stress balance of the suspensions and the stress exchange between the fluid and particle phase. Using this knowledge, we obtain the depth-resolved profiles of the relevant rheological quantities. The scaling behavior of these quantities are examined and compared to data coming from rheometry experiments. We show that rheological properties that have previously been inferred for annular Couette-type shear flows with neutrally buoyant particles still hold in the dense regime for our setup of sediment transport in a Poiseuille flow. Subdividing the total stress into parts from particle contact and hydrodynamics suggests a critical particle volume fraction of 0.3 to separate the dense from the dilute regime. In the dilute regime, i.e., the sediment transport layer, long-range hydrodynamic interactions are screened by the porous medium and the effective viscosity obeys the Einstein relation.
*The authors gratefully acknowledge funding by the German Research Foundation (DFG) (VO2413/2-1), the Department of Energy Office of Science Graduate Fellowship Program (DOE SCGF), the Petroleum Research Fund (54948-ND9), the NSF (CBET-1803380 and OCE-1924655), the Army Research Office (W911NF-18-1-0379) and the Labex MEC (ANR-10-LABX-0092) under the A*MIDEX project (ANR-11-IDEX-0001-02).
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