Impact of particle friction and stiffness on silo discharge
ORAL
Abstract
The silo discharge process was studied experimentally and numerically, varying the particle stiffness and friction. We obtained that lowering the friction coefficient of soft grains (relative deformation in the order of 10%) leads to a gradual change in the discharge curve: the flow rate becomes filling height dependent, decreasing during the discharge process. Hard grains with a maximum relative deformation of 0.05% showed a similar but less pronounced trend. The force acting at the silo bottom revealed a gradual transition from Janssen to hydrostatic-like behavior when decreasing friction. In addition, we computed the macroscopic density, velocity, and stress tensor fields by applying coarse-graining to the DEM simulation data. The analysis of the pressure fields revealed significant differences in the spatial stress transmission, when examining soft or hard particles. We proposed a phenomenological formulation based on the momentum balance that predicts the linear decrease of the flow rate with decreasing filling height for soft low-friction particles.
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Publication: Pongó, T., Stiga, V., Török, J., Lévay, S., Szabó, B., Stannarius, R., Hidalgo, R.C. and Börzsönyi, T., 2021. Flow in an hourglass: particle friction and stiffness matter. New Journal of Physics, 23(2), p.023001.
Presenters
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Tivadar Pongó
Universidad de Navarra
Authors
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Tivadar Pongó
Universidad de Navarra
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Viktória Stiga
Wigner Research Centre for Physics
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János Török
Budapest University of Technology and Economics
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Sára Lévay
Budapest University of Technology and Economics
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Ralf Stannarius
Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg
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Raúl Cruz Hidalgo
Universidad de Navarra
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Tamás Börzsönyi
Wigner Research Centre for Physics