Publication | Closed Access
A dynamical systems approach to mixing and segregation of granular materials in tumblers
146
Citations
178
References
2007
Year
EngineeringFluid MechanicsMechanical EngineeringGranular MediumPeriodic PointsSoft MatterRheologyChaotic MixingGranular MatterParticle-laden FlowMaterials ScienceDynamical Systems ApproachPhysicsDisperse FlowMultiphase FlowGranular MixingNatural SciencesApplied PhysicsFluid-solid InteractionGranular MaterialsMultiscale Modeling
Abstract The physics of granular matter is one of the big questions in science. Granular matter serves as a prototype of collective systems far from equilibrium and fundamental questions remain. At the same time, an understanding of granular matter has tremendous practical importance. Among practical problems, granular mixing and its interplay with segregation is arguably at the top of the list in terms of impact. Granular mixing in three-dimensional systems is complicated, as flow induces segregation by particle size or density. Several approaches and points of view for analysis are possible in principle, ranging from continuum to discrete. Flow and segregation in three-dimensional systems is seemingly complicated; however, to a reasonable approximation, all of the dynamics takes place in a thin flowing surface layer. This observation, coupled with key experimental results, leads to a simple, compact and extensible continuum-based dynamical systems framework applicable to time-periodic flow in quasi-two-dimensional tumblers and three-dimensional systems (such as spheres and cubes) rotated about one or more axes of rotation. The case of time-periodic systems, in its simplest version, can be viewed as a mapping of a domain into itself. The placement of periodic points can be investigated using symmetry concepts; the character of the periodic points and associated manifolds provides a skeleton for the flow and a template for segregation processes occurring in the flow. Keywords: ChaosGranular matterMixingSegregationDynamical systemsGranular flow Acknowledgements We gratefully acknowledge the support of the Office of Basic Energy Sciences of the Department of Energy, which funded much of our work described in this article. The first author also acknowledges support by a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship.
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