Abstract

Dilute gas–particle suspensions in which the particles are carried by the fluid are found in various industrial and geophysical contexts. One fundamental issue that limits our understanding of such systems is the difficulty to obtain information on the particle concentration inside these often optically opaque suspensions. To overcome this difficulty, we develop ultrasonic spectroscopy to monitor the local particle concentration phi of glass particles (with diameters dsim 77 upmum or 155 upmum) suspended in air. First, we determine the minimal air velocity, U^*, necessary to suspend the particles from the maximum decrease in the transmitted wave amplitude and velocity of ultrasound propagating through the suspension. Next, setting the air velocity at U^*, we increase the mass of particles and monitor acoustically the local solid volume fraction, phi, by measuring the ultrasound wave attenuation coefficient and phase velocity as a function of frequency on the basis of classical scattering and hydrodynamic models. For the frequency ranges and suspensions considered here, the viscous dissipation dominates over scattering and thermal conduction losses. We show that, for a characteristic air velocity U^*, the locally measured phi reaches a critical value, in agreement with a recent study on turbulent gas–particle mixtures. Moreover, we find that this critical phi increases with the size of the particles. Finally, analysis of the temporal fluctuations of the locally measured solid volume fraction, suggests that high density regions (clusters) are present even in suspensions with concentrations below the critical concentration. This differs from the current hypothesis according to which the critical concentration coincides with the onset of cluster formation.

Highlights

  • Dilute gas–particle suspensions in which the particles are carried by the fluid are found in various industrial and geophysical contexts

  • We use acoustic probing for the first time, to the best of our knowledge, to monitor the local solid volume fraction inside optically opaque turbulent gas–particle mixtures

  • We find that the acoustic attenuation coefficient and velocity decrease with increasing input solid volume fraction

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Summary

Introduction

Dilute gas–particle suspensions in which the particles are carried by the fluid are found in various industrial and geophysical contexts. Setting the air velocity at U∗ , we increase the mass of particles and monitor acoustically the local solid volume fraction, φ , by measuring the ultrasound wave attenuation coefficient and phase velocity as a function of frequency on the basis of classical scattering and hydrodynamic models. One major issue that limits our understanding of turbulent gas–particle suspensions is the difficulty to determine the solid volume fraction inside these mixtures which are often opaque. We use acoustic probing for the first time, to the best of our knowledge, to monitor the local solid volume fraction inside optically opaque turbulent gas–particle mixtures (dilute suspensions). We discuss two important properties of these mixtures, namely, the maximum solid volume fraction ∼ 5–10% that may be suspended at U∗ , and the formation of particle clusters

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