Abstract

A model along with experimental validation is presented for fiber re-orientation within the flow of a thin fluid layer down an inclined plane. Unlike the usual approach (Jeffery), the model accommodates the fast-changing velocity gradient defying linearization and the flow constraints due to the thin thickness of the fluid film. Model equations are formulated, and the algorithm for the fiber rotation is developed. The velocity field within the channel is obtained, using COMSOLTM multiphase simulation. The formulated model equations are used to track the orientation of a single fiber. The spatial fiber orientation state is described in terms of the second order tensor by tracking multiple individual fibers with different initial orientations. To validate the model's predictions, an experimental setup was fabricated to record individual fiber kinematics during the flow and to describe the orientation of fibers in the open channel. A novel benchmark for assessing fiber re-orientation models is presented, wherein the dynamics of fiber orientation is observed in response to a semicircular obstacle within the fluid flow. The experimental results are compared to model predictions and are in reasonable agreement. Despite the simplified approach, both the dynamic of single fiber and the development of fiber orientation distribution due to the obstacle can be reasonably predicted.

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