Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9530996 | Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 2005 | 20 Pages |
Abstract
The transient simulations can be divided into two dynamic regimes: an initial shock followed by a transition to steady state. During the initial shock phase, treatment of the granular pressure and viscosity led to greater particle velocities relative to the inviscid calculation due to the development of higher gas pressure at fragmentation. However, as steady state is approached the viscosity slows the particle phase relative to the inviscid counterpart for particles greater than a millimeter. The modeled sub-millimeter particle velocity was insensitive to the treatment of the granular pressure and viscosity. Centimeter-scale particles have a much higher granular viscosity (up to 10â1 Pa·s) and the kinetic theory calculation is thus relevant in these conditions. After reaching steady state, the differential velocity between gas and particles at the conduit exit correlates with particle size for both the inviscid and granular viscosity calculations: negligible differential velocity develops for sub-millimeter particles, but centimeter-scale particles exit the conduit with >5% differential velocity between phases.
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Authors
J. Dufek, G.W. Bergantz,