Abstract

Experimental study is performed to understand and quantify the wall and eccentric retardation effects on spheres settling in shear thinning and shear-thinning viscoelastic fluids over a wide range of diameter ratios (0.02 < λ < 0.9). The four-parameter Carreau viscosity equation has been chosen to represent the apparent viscosity-shear rate of polyacrylamide solutions. Two new wall factor corrections are presented with excellent agreement compared to experimental data.The terminal settling velocity of a sphere in bounded fluid is significantly reduced by the presence of confining boundaries, named wall retardation effect that decreases due to the shear-thinning behavior of power law fluids, which is weaken further by the elastic effect of viscoelastic fluids. The wall factors of spheres settling in viscoelastic fluids increase at low ξ up to 50, followed by a horizontal confidence region (0.7 ≤ f ≤ 1) at high ξ. In this region, the wall factor is mainly dominated by fluids’ elasticity, which is more distinguished for small spheres. As the settling spheres approach to the wall (b/R → 1), the neighboring wall exert more intensive retardation that reduce the terminal settling velocity greatly when b/R > 0.6 in pure shear-thinning fluids, and the extra retardation effect of nearby wall increases at high concentration due to the enhanced non-Newtonian property. In contrast, the eccentric effect on settling velocity in viscoelastic fluids is cut down greatly by the fluid's elasticity, which is negligible.

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