Viscous resuspension in a tube: The impact of secondary flows resulting from second normal stress differences
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3532054
DOI10.1063/1.2720533zbMath1146.76510OpenAlexW1966692296WikidataQ118641205 ScholiaQ118641205MaRDI QIDQ3532054
Arun Ramachandran, David T. Jun. Leighton
Publication date: 3 November 2008
Published in: Physics of Fluids (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2720533
Related Items
The hydrodynamics of confined dispersions ⋮ Single-fluid model of a mixture for laminar flows of highly concentrated suspensions ⋮ The influence of secondary flows induced by normal stress differences on the shear-induced migration of particles in concentrated suspensions ⋮ A macrotransport equation for the Hele-Shaw flow of a concentrated suspension
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Normal stress-driven migration and axial development in pressure-driven flow of concentrated suspensions
- Second normal stress jump instability in non-Newtonian fluids
- Shear-induced resuspension in a couette device
- The flow of a very concentrated slurry in a parallel-plate device: Influence of gravity
- Slow viscous flows of highly concentrated suspensions—Part II: Particle migration, velocity and concentration profiles in rectangular ducts
- Pressure-driven flow of a suspension: Buoyancy effects
- A constitutive equation for concentrated suspensions that accounts for shear-induced particle migration
- Pressure-driven flow of suspensions: simulation and theory
- Gravitational instability in suspension flow
- Migration of buoyant particles in low-Reynolds-number pressure-driven flows
- A numerical and experimental study of batch sedimentation and viscous resuspension
- Viscous resuspension of a sediment within a laminar and stratified flow
- Dynamic viscous resuspension
- Viscous resuspension in fully developed laminar pipe flows
- An experimental study of viscous resuspension in a pressure-driven plane channel flow
- Flow-aligned tensor models for suspension flows
- The stress system in a suspension of force-free particles