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- 2009 Annual Meeting
- Engineering Sciences and Fundamentals
- Particulate and Multiphase Flow I
- (108g) Stokesian Interactions Between Two Spheres Inside a Narrow Cylindrical Conduit
In this talk, we present our semianalytical formulation which addresses this unsolved problem. Our mathematical procedure is based on basis-function expansion of Stokesian solutions leading to an efficient simulation technique. Though the method can be used for any number of interacting particles, here we concentrate on a two-sphere system explaining dynamics of both particles under different flow-situations and geometric configurations.
First, we consider two closely situated identical spheres inside a narrow cylinder, and find their hydrodynamic frictions for motion in quiescent flow as functions of the particle-positions and cylinder-sphere size-ratios. Next, we determine the force and torque on fixed spheres in parabolic flow, as well as the motion of freely suspended system. Then, we repeat similar calculations for cylinder-bound spheres of asymmetric sizes. Finally, we analyze the flow where a large fixed sphere is blocking the conduit and a small suspended sphere is interacting with pressure-driven flow near the constriction. The last results are especially important because they can describe how suspended bodies like blood-cells behave inside a vessel partially blocked by depositions.