Angular dynamics of non-spherical particles in linear flows related to production of biobased materials

Dispersed particle flows are encountered in many biological, geophysical but also in industrial situations, e.g. during processing of materials. In these flows, the particles usually are non-spherical and their angular dynamics play a crucial role for the final material properties. Generally, the an...

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Main Author: Rosén, Tomas
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: KTH, Linné Flow Center, FLOW 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-193124
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7729-139-8
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-kth-1931242016-09-30T05:10:01ZAngular dynamics of non-spherical particles in linear flows related to production of biobased materialsengRosén, TomasKTH, Linné Flow Center, FLOWKTH, Wallenberg Wood Science CenterKTH, MekanikKTH Royal Institute of TechnologyStockholm2016Fluid mechanicsdispersed particle flowsinertianon-linear dynamicsrotary diffusioncharacterization techniquesDispersed particle flows are encountered in many biological, geophysical but also in industrial situations, e.g. during processing of materials. In these flows, the particles usually are non-spherical and their angular dynamics play a crucial role for the final material properties. Generally, the angular dynamics of a particle is dependent on the local flow in the frame-of-reference of this particle. In this frame, the surrounding flow can be linearized and the linear velocity gradient will determine how the particle rotates. In this thesis, the main objective is to improve the fundamental knowledge of the angular dynamics of non-spherical particles related to two specific biobased material processes. Firstly, the flow of suspended cellulose fibers in a papermaking process is used as a motivation. In this process, strong shear rates close to walls and the size of the fibers motivates the study of inertial effects on a single particle in a simple shear flow. Through direct numerical simulations combined with a global stability analysis, this flow problem is approached and all stable rotational states are found for spheroidal particles with aspect ratios ranging from moderately slender fibers to thin disc-shaped particles. The second material process of interest is the production of strong cellulose filaments produced through hydrodynamic alignment and assembly of cellulose nanofibrils (CNF). The flow in the preparation process and the small size of the particles motivates the study of alignment and rotary diffusion of CNF in a strain flow. However, since the particles are smaller than the wavelength of visible light, the dynamics of CNF is not easily captured with standard optical techniques. With a new flow-stop experiment, rotary diffusion of CNF is measured using Polarized optical microscopy. This process is found to be quite complicated, where short-range interactions between fibrils seem to play an important role. New time-resolved X-ray characterization techniques were used to target the underlying mechanisms, but are found to be limited by the strong degradation of CNF due to the radiation. Although the results in this thesis have limited direct applicability, they provide important fundamental stepping stones towards the possibility to control fiber orientation in flows and can potentially lead to new tailor-made materials assembled from a nano-scale. <p>QC 20160929</p>Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-193124urn:isbn:978-91-7729-139-8TRITA-MEK, 0348-467X ; 2016:14application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Fluid mechanics
dispersed particle flows
inertia
non-linear dynamics
rotary diffusion
characterization techniques
spellingShingle Fluid mechanics
dispersed particle flows
inertia
non-linear dynamics
rotary diffusion
characterization techniques
Rosén, Tomas
Angular dynamics of non-spherical particles in linear flows related to production of biobased materials
description Dispersed particle flows are encountered in many biological, geophysical but also in industrial situations, e.g. during processing of materials. In these flows, the particles usually are non-spherical and their angular dynamics play a crucial role for the final material properties. Generally, the angular dynamics of a particle is dependent on the local flow in the frame-of-reference of this particle. In this frame, the surrounding flow can be linearized and the linear velocity gradient will determine how the particle rotates. In this thesis, the main objective is to improve the fundamental knowledge of the angular dynamics of non-spherical particles related to two specific biobased material processes. Firstly, the flow of suspended cellulose fibers in a papermaking process is used as a motivation. In this process, strong shear rates close to walls and the size of the fibers motivates the study of inertial effects on a single particle in a simple shear flow. Through direct numerical simulations combined with a global stability analysis, this flow problem is approached and all stable rotational states are found for spheroidal particles with aspect ratios ranging from moderately slender fibers to thin disc-shaped particles. The second material process of interest is the production of strong cellulose filaments produced through hydrodynamic alignment and assembly of cellulose nanofibrils (CNF). The flow in the preparation process and the small size of the particles motivates the study of alignment and rotary diffusion of CNF in a strain flow. However, since the particles are smaller than the wavelength of visible light, the dynamics of CNF is not easily captured with standard optical techniques. With a new flow-stop experiment, rotary diffusion of CNF is measured using Polarized optical microscopy. This process is found to be quite complicated, where short-range interactions between fibrils seem to play an important role. New time-resolved X-ray characterization techniques were used to target the underlying mechanisms, but are found to be limited by the strong degradation of CNF due to the radiation. Although the results in this thesis have limited direct applicability, they provide important fundamental stepping stones towards the possibility to control fiber orientation in flows and can potentially lead to new tailor-made materials assembled from a nano-scale. === <p>QC 20160929</p>
author Rosén, Tomas
author_facet Rosén, Tomas
author_sort Rosén, Tomas
title Angular dynamics of non-spherical particles in linear flows related to production of biobased materials
title_short Angular dynamics of non-spherical particles in linear flows related to production of biobased materials
title_full Angular dynamics of non-spherical particles in linear flows related to production of biobased materials
title_fullStr Angular dynamics of non-spherical particles in linear flows related to production of biobased materials
title_full_unstemmed Angular dynamics of non-spherical particles in linear flows related to production of biobased materials
title_sort angular dynamics of non-spherical particles in linear flows related to production of biobased materials
publisher KTH, Linné Flow Center, FLOW
publishDate 2016
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-193124
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7729-139-8
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