1 / 22

Particle-size segregation patterns in convex rotating drums

Particle-size segregation patterns in convex rotating drums. By D.G.Mounty & J.M.N.T Gray. Motivation for the problem. [1]. Industrially important Segregation is important in rotating kilns and mixers used in bulk chemical, mining and pharmaceutical industries. [1] http://www.danntech.co.za.

trevet
Download Presentation

Particle-size segregation patterns in convex rotating drums

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Particle-size segregation patterns in convex rotating drums By D.G.Mounty & J.M.N.T Gray

  2. Motivation for the problem [1] • Industrially important • Segregation is important in rotating kilns and mixers used in bulk chemical, mining and pharmaceutical industries [1] http://www.danntech.co.za

  3. Axial Banding Band in Band Segregation [2] • In long drums, axial segregation can develop over longer time scales • We want to understand the 2D base segregation problem [2] Newey et al. (2004) Europhys. Lett. 66 (2)

  4. Thin two-dimensional rotating drums • Focus on strong segregation • Sharp transition between regions of large and small particles • Thins drum suppress the axial instability • We can perform experiments on the 2D base flow [3] Hill et al. (1997) Phys. Rev. Lett. 78 [4] Gray & Hutter (1997) Contin. Mech. & Thermodyn. 9(6)

  5. Particle-size segregation and remixing • Mixture theory framework for segregation in dense flows • Small particle concentration 0≤Φ≤1 • Segregation-Remixing equation [7][8] • No small particle flux boundary conditions • We will study the non diffusive-remixing limit Dr = 0 [5] Savage & Lun (1988) J. Fluid. Mech. 189 [6] Dolgunin & Ukolov (1995) Powder Technol. 83 [7] Gray & Thornton (2005) Proc. R. Soc. 461 [8] Gray & Chugunov, J. Fluid. Mech (In Press)

  6. Concentration shocks [9] • Velocity field must be prescribed • Construct exact steady and unsteady solutions • Concentration shocks idealize sharp transitions • Use shock-capturing numerical methods for general problems [9] Gray et al. (2006) Proc. R. Soc. 462

  7. Geometry of the full system Erosion Deposition • Base flow has two domains • Dense avalanche at free surface • Solid rotating body underneath • Use segregation theory to compute concentrations in avalanche region

  8. Segregation in the Avalanche Large Mixed Small Erosion Deposition • Solve in the parabolic avalanche domain • Jump in velocities and behavior at boundary

  9. Segregation in the full system • What you might actually see • Thin avalanche, sharp segregation

  10. Simplified model • Find the surface by conservation of area • Projection of all free surface positions

  11. The mapping method • Integrate each species between surfaces • Place sorted material down slope

  12. Triangle experiment

  13. Triangle simulation

  14. Varying ratio

  15. Varying fill

  16. Symmetry 8.3% 25.0% 41.7% 91.7% 75.0% 58.3% • Symmetry of corresponding low and high fill levels • We may restrict analysis to fills over 50%

  17. Fifty percent • Not what the simulation predicts • Different time scale • Dynamics of avalanche and segregation within are critical [10] Zuriguel et al. (2006) Phys. Rev. E 73

  18. Various Figures • More sides implies shorter lobes • Circle is limiting case

  19. Square simulation

  20. Overview • Fills over 60% and under 40% are well predicted • Below 40% is more “industrially important”

  21. Difference time series • At long time there seem to be two groups • Fifty percent seems to be a special case

  22. Possible Bifurcation • Very marked jump between 65%/70% • More thorough study required

More Related