Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, University of Colorado , Boulder, Colorado 80309-0596, USA
Abstract
Oblique collisions of three solid spheres coated with thin viscous layers are simulated, both to elucidate the interesting physics of the collision outcomes and to lay the groundwork for a new approach to modeling flows of many wet particles. Included in the analysis are fluid viscous and capillary forces, as well as solid contact and friction forces. A novel approach is developed based on a rotating polar coordinate system for each particle pair in near contact, including the possibility that a given particle is in simultaneous contact with both other particles. As the Stokes number (a dimensionless ratio of particle inertia and viscous forces) is increased, the collision outcome progresses from full agglomeration (all three particles sticking together due to viscous and capillary forces) to partial agglomeration (two particles sticking together while the third one separates) to full separation (all three particles separating post-collision). The results are also sensitive to various physical and geometrical properties, such as the ratio of fluid film thickness to particle diameter, the coefficient of friction, and the collision angles.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Subject
Condensed Matter Physics,Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes,Mechanics of Materials,Computational Mechanics,Mechanical Engineering