Lubricant particles coat bulk grains to cut friction and raise flow rate up to an optimum, after which densification and damping slow the flow.
Surface coating induced lubrication in flowing granular materials
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abstract
We investigate the flow of spherical, bulk granular particles down an inclined plane mixed with small-sized spherical lubricant particles using discrete element method simulations. Predefined cohesive interaction is implemented between lubricant and bulk particles, enabling the coating of the former over the latter. The overall flow rate exhibits non-monotonic dependence on lubricant content. Initially, it increases with lubricant addition, reaches a maximum at an intermediate lubricant content, and decreases for even higher lubricant content. The increase in the flow rate is attributed to a lower inter-particle friction coefficient between lubricant-coated bulk particles. The decrease in the flow rate at higher lubricant content, on the other hand, is attributed to enhanced densification and increased damping between crowded particles. Both these occurrences are examined using various flow level characteristics. The simulation results are found to be in qualitative agreement with previous experimental results. Overall, the outcome integrates novel computational insights and prior experimental results to enhance the understanding of the powder lubrication phenomena.
fields
cond-mat.soft 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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Surface coating induced lubrication in flowing granular materials
Lubricant particles coat bulk grains to cut friction and raise flow rate up to an optimum, after which densification and damping slow the flow.