Characterizing jamming of dilute and semi-dilute fiber suspensions in a sudden contraction and a T-junction
Miguel E. Villalba, Masoud Daneshi, D. Mark Martinez- Condensed Matter Physics
- Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
- Mechanics of Materials
- Computational Mechanics
- Mechanical Engineering
The clogging or jamming of particle suspensions is a ubiquitous problem, hindering the efficiency of particle–liquid and particle–particle separations. Motivated by pressure screening in the pulp and paper industry, we characterize jamming of dilute and semi-dilute mono-disperse rigid-rod suspensions passing through channels mimicking dead-end and cross-flow filtration membranes, experimentally, using particle-tracking velocimetry. We observe that jams nucleate by either bridging of isolated particles across the constriction, or by localized mechanical entanglement of the particles, i.e., flocculation. Uniquely, we observe floc-formation during acceleration into the aperture and report this as primary mechanism for jamming events. We characterized the accumulation-release cycles of the jamming event using an exponential probability distribution; this distribution is indicative of a Poisson process. For jams nucleated by single-particle bridging, the distribution is (primarily) related to the number of fibers passing through the aperture; this is similar to dry, granular materials. For floc-based nucleation events, the distribution is (primarily) related to the suspension concentration with the average time between jams decreasing inversely with the square-root of the initial suspension concentration. For the conditions tested, the distribution was insensitive to changes in constriction geometry.