(89g) Pressure Drop and Flow Evolution of a Concentrated Suspension in an Abrupt Expansion
AIChE Annual Meeting
2006
2006 Annual Meeting
Engineering Sciences and Fundamentals
Particulate and Multiphase Flow
Monday, November 13, 2006 - 2:00pm to 2:15pm
Our research aims to enhance the fundamental understanding of the flow of a concentrated suspension through an abrupt expansion, which can be encountered in such applications as materials processing or flow in the circulatory system. In this study, suspensions of neutrally buoyant, noncolloidal spheres in Newtonian liquids undergo steady, pressure-driven flow in an abrupt, axisymmetric 1:4 expansion. Nuclear magnetic resonance imaging (NMRI) is used to measure the steady-state particle concentration and velocity profiles, as well as the evolution of the concentration and velocity profiles during start-up. The effects of particle migration on the pressure field in the system are also investigated, and the role of particle and flow properties (e.g. particle volume fraction, particle size, particle and flow Reynolds number, and inlet conditions) is examined. Results from experiments on the flow evolution and pressure field will be presented and compared with existing models.