Driven granular media : mixing, friction & activity

Sand, coffee beans and mud all belong to a class of materials that we call granular media. Despite their relevance in industry and agriculture, the flow behaviour of these materials remains poorly understood. In particular, it is unclear how specific properties of the particles, governing the interactions at the microscopic level, influence the macroscopic flow response. In practice, it is often difficult to vary particle properties, such as stiffness or friction coefficient, in a controlled way. In this thesis, we investigate flows of granular materials with well-defined particle properties, by synthesizing the particles using novel methods. In Part I of the thesis, we investigate the role of friction in shear flows of granular suspensions. We present a method to produce millimetre-sized hydrogel particles, and investigate how the chemistry of the hydrogels affects the material friction coefficient, and subsequently determine how this relates to macroscopic flow behaviour. In Part II of the thesis, we study granular materials in systems where they are not driven by the walls, but rather from within the material. We study how passive particles driven by a single magnet can aid mixing in a microfluidic mixing chip. We also take care that the pressure drop, which limits the simple use of microfluidic chips, is greatly reduced compared to commercially available solutions. Finally, we investigate the role of geometric friction in a granular material in which each particle is individually driven to rotate. The activity of these 3D-printed particles, combined with frictional coupling of rotational and translational degrees of freedom, leads to the emergence of a granular material that displays collective behaviour. The thesis is concluded with a general discussion.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Workamp, Marcel Jan
Other Authors: van der Gucht, J.
Format: Doctoral thesis biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Wageningen University
Subjects:Life Science,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/driven-granular-media-mixing-friction-amp-activity
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-538119
record_format koha
spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5381192024-09-30 Workamp, Marcel Jan van der Gucht, J. Dijksman, J.A. Doctoral thesis Driven granular media : mixing, friction & activity 2018 Sand, coffee beans and mud all belong to a class of materials that we call granular media. Despite their relevance in industry and agriculture, the flow behaviour of these materials remains poorly understood. In particular, it is unclear how specific properties of the particles, governing the interactions at the microscopic level, influence the macroscopic flow response. In practice, it is often difficult to vary particle properties, such as stiffness or friction coefficient, in a controlled way. In this thesis, we investigate flows of granular materials with well-defined particle properties, by synthesizing the particles using novel methods. In Part I of the thesis, we investigate the role of friction in shear flows of granular suspensions. We present a method to produce millimetre-sized hydrogel particles, and investigate how the chemistry of the hydrogels affects the material friction coefficient, and subsequently determine how this relates to macroscopic flow behaviour. In Part II of the thesis, we study granular materials in systems where they are not driven by the walls, but rather from within the material. We study how passive particles driven by a single magnet can aid mixing in a microfluidic mixing chip. We also take care that the pressure drop, which limits the simple use of microfluidic chips, is greatly reduced compared to commercially available solutions. Finally, we investigate the role of geometric friction in a granular material in which each particle is individually driven to rotate. The activity of these 3D-printed particles, combined with frictional coupling of rotational and translational degrees of freedom, leads to the emergence of a granular material that displays collective behaviour. The thesis is concluded with a general discussion. en Wageningen University application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/driven-granular-media-mixing-friction-amp-activity 10.18174/442126 https://edepot.wur.nl/442126 Life Science Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Life Science
Life Science
spellingShingle Life Science
Life Science
Workamp, Marcel Jan
Driven granular media : mixing, friction & activity
description Sand, coffee beans and mud all belong to a class of materials that we call granular media. Despite their relevance in industry and agriculture, the flow behaviour of these materials remains poorly understood. In particular, it is unclear how specific properties of the particles, governing the interactions at the microscopic level, influence the macroscopic flow response. In practice, it is often difficult to vary particle properties, such as stiffness or friction coefficient, in a controlled way. In this thesis, we investigate flows of granular materials with well-defined particle properties, by synthesizing the particles using novel methods. In Part I of the thesis, we investigate the role of friction in shear flows of granular suspensions. We present a method to produce millimetre-sized hydrogel particles, and investigate how the chemistry of the hydrogels affects the material friction coefficient, and subsequently determine how this relates to macroscopic flow behaviour. In Part II of the thesis, we study granular materials in systems where they are not driven by the walls, but rather from within the material. We study how passive particles driven by a single magnet can aid mixing in a microfluidic mixing chip. We also take care that the pressure drop, which limits the simple use of microfluidic chips, is greatly reduced compared to commercially available solutions. Finally, we investigate the role of geometric friction in a granular material in which each particle is individually driven to rotate. The activity of these 3D-printed particles, combined with frictional coupling of rotational and translational degrees of freedom, leads to the emergence of a granular material that displays collective behaviour. The thesis is concluded with a general discussion.
author2 van der Gucht, J.
author_facet van der Gucht, J.
Workamp, Marcel Jan
format Doctoral thesis
topic_facet Life Science
author Workamp, Marcel Jan
author_sort Workamp, Marcel Jan
title Driven granular media : mixing, friction & activity
title_short Driven granular media : mixing, friction & activity
title_full Driven granular media : mixing, friction & activity
title_fullStr Driven granular media : mixing, friction & activity
title_full_unstemmed Driven granular media : mixing, friction & activity
title_sort driven granular media : mixing, friction & activity
publisher Wageningen University
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/driven-granular-media-mixing-friction-amp-activity
work_keys_str_mv AT workampmarceljan drivengranularmediamixingfrictionactivity
_version_ 1813198046664589312