Creeping motion of a sphere through a Bingham plastic
- 1 September 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Fluid Mechanics
- Vol. 158, 219-244
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022112085002622
Abstract
A solid sphere falling through a Bingham plastic moves in a small envelope of fluid with shape that depends on the yield stress. A finite-element/Newton method is presented for solving the free-boundary problem composed of the velocity and pressure fields and the yield surfaces for creeping flow. Besides the outer surface, solid occurs as caps at the front and back of the sphere because of the stagnation points in the flow. The accuracy of solutions is ascertained by mesh refinement and by calculation of the integrals corresponding to the maximum and minimum variational principles for the problem. Large differences from the Newtonian values in the flow pattern around the sphere and in the drag coefficient are predicted, depending on the dimensionless value of the critical yield stress Yg below which the material acts as a solid. The computed flow fields differ appreciably from Stokes’ solution. The sphere will fall only when Yg is below 0.143 For yield stresses near this value, a plastic boundary layer forms next to the sphere. Boundary-layer scalings give the correct forms of the dependence of the drag coefficient and mass-transfer coefficient on yield stress for values near the critical one. The Stokes limit of zero yield stress is singular in the sense that for any small value of Yg there is a region of the flow away from the sphere where the plastic portion of the viscosity is at least as important as the Newtonian part. Calculations For the approach of the flow field to the Stokes result are in good agreement with the scalings derived from the matched asymptotic expansion valid in this limit.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Flow of bingham fluids in complex geometriesJournal of Non-Newtonian Fluid Mechanics, 1984
- A finite element for the numerical solution of viscous incompressible flowsJournal of Computational Physics, 1979
- Finite element analysis of incompressible viscous flows by the penalty function formulationJournal of Computational Physics, 1979
- Bubble motion and mass transfer in non‐Newtonian fluids: Part I. Single bubble in power law and Bingham fluidsAIChE Journal, 1978
- Frontal solution program for unsymmetric matricesInternational Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering, 1976
- On Creeping Flow of a Visco-Plastic Fluid past a SphereChemical engineering, 1971
- Motion of spherical particles in a Bingham plasticAIChE Journal, 1967
- The terminal velocity of spheres in Bingham plasticsBritish Journal of Applied Physics, 1965
- Forced convection transfer around spheres at intermediate reynolds numbersThe Canadian Journal of Chemical Engineering, 1962
- Expansions at small Reynolds numbers for the flow past a sphere and a circular cylinderJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1957