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On the dual effect of obstacles in preventing silo clogging in 2D

Physics

On the dual effect of obstacles in preventing silo clogging in 2D

D. Gella, D. Yanagisawa, et al.

Discover how an innovative experiment by Diego Gella, Daichi Yanagisawa, Rodrigo Caitano, María Victoria Ferreyra, and Iker Zuriguel reveals that strategically placing an obstacle above a silo's exit can significantly reduce clog formation during granular material discharge. This groundbreaking study explores the mechanisms at play and proposes a unified formulation, advancing our understanding of granular dynamics.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Placing an obstacle in front of a bottleneck has been proposed as a sound alternative to improve the flow of discrete materials in a wide variety of scenarios. Nevertheless, the physical reasons behind this behavior are not fully understood and the suitability of this practice has been recently challenged for pedestrian evacuations. In this work, we experimentally demonstrate that for the case of inert grains discharging from a silo, an obstacle above the exit leads to a reduction of clog formation via two different mechanisms: i) an alteration of the kinematic properties in the outlet proximities that prevents the stabilization of arches; and ii) an introduction of a clear anisotropy in the contact fabric tensor that becomes relevant when working at a quasi-static regime. Then, both mechanisms are encompassed using a single formulation that could be inspiring for other, more complex, systems.
Publisher
Communications Physics
Published On
Jan 10, 2022
Authors
Diego Gella, Daichi Yanagisawa, Rodrigo Caitano, María Victoria Ferreyra, Iker Zuriguel
Tags
granular material
silo
clog formation
kinematic properties
contact fabric tensor
mechanisms
discharge
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