Abstract
Measurements are reported of the pressure differences ΔP existing at large distances above and below a ball settling along the axis of a circular cylinder filled with an otherwise quiescent viscous Newtonian liquid in which identical particles, comparable in size to the settling ball, are suspended. The suspensions ranged in solids volume fraction ϕ from 0.30 to 0.50 and consisted of 0.635 cm diameter spheres density-matched to the suspending oil. The settling balls varied in diameter from 0.318 to 1.27 cm, resulting in particle Reynolds numbers always less than about 0.4 based upon ball diameter and the effective viscosity of the suspension. For the moderately concentrated suspension (ϕ=0.30), the product of ΔP with the cross-sectional area A of the containing cylinder was observed to be equal to twice the drag force D on the settling sphere, in accord with theory. In the more concentrated suspension (ϕ=0.50) this product was found to be slightly, but significantly, less than twice the drag on the settling sphere. It is speculated that this lower pressure drop may result from the presence of one or more of the following phenomena: (i) migration of the falling ball off the cylinder axis ; (ii) apparent slip of the suspension at the cylinder wall; (iii) blunting of the otherwise Poiseuillian parabolic velocity profile, the latter phenomenon being known to occur during the creeping flow of concentrated suspensions through circular tubes. Incidental to the suspension experiments, for a homogeneous fluid we verify the classical theoretical formula for the off-axis pressure drop when the sphere settles at a non-concentric position in the cylinder.
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