2016 AIChE Annual Meeting
(378e) A Dilation-Driven Secondary Flow in Sheared Granular Materials, and Its Rheological Signature
In this presentation, we report the robustness of the vortex to variations in the parameters that determine inter-grain interactions, and to confining pressures exerted at the top of the granular column. We present the results of DEM simulations and experiments for granular columns confined at the top by a freely movable weight. We show that the strength of the vortex decreases with increasing confining pressure, but its essential features, such as the sense of rotation and symmetry, remain unchanged. We show how the character of the vortex changes from anti-centrifugal to centrifugal as the shear rate is increased, establishing that the vortex is indeed driven by dilation in the dense, slow flow regime. Finally, we propose a continuum plasticity model that accounts for dilation in viscometric flows, and provides a plausible explanation for how the vortex may arise as an instability.
2Gutam, K. J., Mehandia, V. & Nott, P. R., Rheometry of granular materials in cylindrical Couette cells: anomalous stress caused by gravity and shear. Phys. Fluids 25, 070602 (2013).