Influence of boundary condition on the sound velocity in granular assembly: Spiral tube versus cylinder

[Display omitted] •A method to determine the contact point between particles is provided.•Spherical and super-ellipsoidal systems in a spiral tube are simulated by DEM.•The sound velocities in a spiral tube are smaller than those in cylinder confinement.•The system properties in a spiral tube are di...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inAdvanced powder technology : the international journal of the Society of Powder Technology, Japan Vol. 34; no. 1; p. 103887
Main Authors Chen, Mei, Chen, Xiangui, Li, Chengbo, Gao, Qingqing, Zhao, Chuang
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 01.01.2023
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:[Display omitted] •A method to determine the contact point between particles is provided.•Spherical and super-ellipsoidal systems in a spiral tube are simulated by DEM.•The sound velocities in a spiral tube are smaller than those in cylinder confinement.•The system properties in a spiral tube are different from those of other systems. The properties of elastic wave propagation in granular assemblies have become a subject of immense interest in recent years, however, the influence of different confinements on the sound velocity is seldom investigated. This study provides a method to determine the contact point between spherical, super-ellipsoidal particles and complex boundaries, in order to investigate how the anisotropy induced by particle shape or boundary affects velocity. Taking cylinder and spiral tube confinements as examples, the falling process of spherical and super-ellipsoidal assemblies are simulated to verify the validation by the discrete element method (DEM). The convergence of the kinetic energy during the falling process and the equilibrium state with zero residual kinetic energy guarantees the stability and correctness. On the basis, elastic wave propagation of spherical and super-ellipsoidal systems in spiral tube and cylindrical confinements under different pressures are modelled, and sound velocities are calculated. The effective medium theory (EMT), granular solid hydrodynamics (GSH), and elastic stiffness are used to interpret the relationship between velocity and stress in cylindrical confinement. However, the results in the spiral tube deviate from EMT and GSH, which means the boundary affects velocity significantly. The difference of velocity between spiral tube and cylinder is qualitatively explained from the perspective of anisotropy of contact force distribution in the system. The simulation results show that anisotropy introduced by the curved surface affects the acoustic properties greatly. The method used for spiral boundary is also suitable for other complicated confinements.
ISSN:0921-8831
1568-5527
DOI:10.1016/j.apt.2022.103887