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Journal ArticleDOI

Viscoplastic Poiseuille flow in a rectangular duct with wall slip

TLDR
In this article, the Poiseuille flow of a Herschel-Bulkley fluid in a duct of rectangular cross section is solved numerically under the assumption that slip occurs along the wall following a slip law involving a non-zero slip yield stress.
Abstract
We solve numerically the Poiseuille flow of a Herschel–Bulkley fluid in a duct of rectangular cross section under the assumption that slip occurs along the wall following a slip law involving a non-zero slip yield stress. The constitutive equation is regularized as proposed by Papanastasiou. In addition, we propose a new regularized slip equation which is valid uniformly at any wall shear stress level by means of another regularization parameter. Four different flow regimes are observed defined by three critical values of the pressure gradient. Initially no slip occurs, in the second regime slip occurs only in the middle of the wider wall, in the third regime slip occurs partially at both walls, and eventually variable slip occurs everywhere. The performance of the regularized slip equation in the two intermediate regimes in which wall slip is partial has been tested for both Newtonian and Bingham flows. The convergence of the results with the Papanastasiou regularization parameter has been also studied. The combined effects of viscoplasticity and slip are then investigated. Results are presented for wide ranges of the Bingham and slip numbers and for various values of the power-law exponent and the duct aspect ratio. These compare favorably with available theoretical results and with numerical results in the literature obtained with both regularization and augmented Lagrangian methods.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Progress in numerical simulation of yield stress fluid flows

TL;DR: This paper presents and analyze a variety of applications and extensions involving viscoplastic flow simulations: yield slip at the wall, heat transfer, thixotropy, granular materials, and combining elasticity, with multiple phases and shallow flow approximations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Numerical simulations of complex yield-stress fluid flows

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review several benchmark problems of viscoplastic flows, such as entry and exit flows from dies, flows around a sphere and a bubble and squeeze flows.
Journal ArticleDOI

The PAL (Penalized Augmented Lagrangian) method for computing viscoplastic flows: A new fast converging scheme

TL;DR: In this paper, a penalized augmented Lagrangian (PAL) method is proposed for tracking the yield surface and predicting the flow field of viscoplastic fluids accurately, which is based on a monolithic Newton solver for AL.
Journal ArticleDOI

Axisymmetric squeeze flow of a viscoplastic Bingham medium

TL;DR: In this article, an asymptotic solution for the axisymmetric squeeze flow of a viscoplastic medium was developed, where the plug region is a pseudo-plug region in which the leading order equation predicts a plug, but really it is weakly yielded at higher order.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lattice Boltzmann method for the simulation of the steady flow of a Bingham fluid in a pipe of square cross-section

TL;DR: In this article, an innovative approach based on a modification of the Lattice Boltzmann Method (LBM) has been applied to solve the problem of steady flow in a pipe of square cross-section.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Flows of Materials with Yield

TL;DR: In this article, a modified constitutive relation that applies everywhere in the flow field, in both yielded and practically unyielded regions, is proposed to analyze two-dimensional flows of Bingham fluids.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of the slip (wall depletion) of polymer solutions, emulsions and particle suspensions in viscometers: its cause, character, and cure

TL;DR: Slip occurs in the flow of two-phase systems because of the displacement of the disperse phase away from solid boundaries as mentioned in this paper, which arises from steric, hydrodynamic, viscoelastic and chemical forces and constraints acting on the dispersed phase immediately adjacent to the walls.
Journal ArticleDOI

Extrusion Instabilities and Wall Slip

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the evidence for slip, the possible mechanisms of slip, and the relation between slip and extrusion instabilities, and show that extrusion melts exhibit extrusion instability at sufficiently high levels of stress.
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