Abstract

The study of agglomerate strength is of vital importance in several industrial applications such as pharmaceutical, detergent and food manufacturing. Agglomerates could experience a size reduction during the production and handling processes due to collisions with other agglomerates or with the moving components and walls as well as during bulk flow due to shear deformation. In this analysis, we focus on the agglomerate damage due to oblique impact on walls, as this is a common damage process during, for example, pneumatic conveying and size reduction in pin mills. Computer simulations have been carried out using Distinct Element Analysis, where the breakage characteristics of oblique impacts and the effect of the interparticle bond strength have been analysed. The procedure adopted here provides an isotropic and spherical agglomerate (uniform mass distribution and coordination number within radial segments of the agglomerate). The results indicate that the damage ratio (i.e. the number fraction of the broken bonds) depends on the normal component of the impact velocity only, i.e. the tangential component has little effect. However, the position of the clusters produced on impact does depend on the impact angle, which influences the pattern of breakage and in turn the size distribution of the large clusters.

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