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1.
Soft Matter ; 2024 Apr 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38602178

ABSTRACT

The compaction of cohesive granular materials is a common operation in powder-based manufacture of many products. However, the influence of particle-scale parameters such as bond strength on the packing structure and the general scaling of the compaction process are still poorly understood. We use particle dynamics simulations to analyze jammed configurations obtained by dynamic compaction of sticky particles under a fixed compressive pressure for a broad range of system parameter values. We show that relative porosity, representing the relative importance of porosity with respect to its minimum and maximum values, is a unique function of a modified cohesion number that combines adhesion force, confining pressure, and particle size, as well as contact stiffness, which is often assumed to be ineffective but is shown here to play an essential role in compaction. An asymmetric sigmoidal form based on two power laws provides an excellent fit to the data. The statistical properties of the bond network reveal self-balanced force structures and an exponential fall-off of the number of both tensile and compressive forces. Remarkably, the properties of the bond network depend on the cohesion number rather than the modified cohesion number, implying that similar bond network characteristics are compatible with a broad range of porosities mainly due to the effect of contact stiffness. We also discuss the origins of data points escaping the general scaling of porosity and show that they reflect either finite system size or rigid confining walls.

2.
Langmuir ; 33(6): 1405-1411, 2017 02 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28121447

ABSTRACT

We present here a computational model based on the lattice Boltzmann scheme to investigate the accessibility of active adsorption sites in hierarchical porous materials to adsorbates in a flowing liquid. By studying the transport and adsorption of tracers after they enter the pore space of the virtual sample, we characterize their kinetics as they pass through the pore space and adsorb on the solid-liquid interface. The model is validated on simple geometries with a known analytical solution. We then use it to investigate the influence of regular grooves or disordered roughness on the walls of a slit pore geometry, looking at the impact on adsorption and transport. In particular, we highlight the importance of adsorption site accessibility, which depends on the shape and connectivity of the pore space as well as the fluid flow profile and velocity.

3.
Soft Matter ; 13(4): 875-885, 2017 Jan 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28074205

ABSTRACT

We study here the interplay between transport and adsorption in porous systems with complex geometries under fluid flow. Using a lattice Boltzmann scheme extended to take into account the adsorption at solid/fluid interfaces, we investigate the influence of pore geometry and internal surface roughness on the efficiency of fluid flow and the adsorption of molecular species inside the pore space. We show how the occurrence of roughness on pore walls acts effectively as a modification of the solid/fluid boundary conditions, introducing slippage at the interface. We then compare three common pore geometries, namely honeycomb pores, inverse opal, and materials produced by spinodal decomposition. Finally, we quantify the influence of those three geometries on fluid transport and tracer adsorption. This opens perspectives for the optimization of materials' geometries for applications in dynamic adsorption under fluid flow.

4.
Soft Matter ; 11(30): 6125-33, 2015 Aug 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26139013

ABSTRACT

We study the interplay between transport and adsorption in porous systems under a fluid flow, based on a lattice Boltzmann scheme extended to account for adsorption. We performed simulations on well-controlled geometries with slit and grooved pores, investigating the influence of adsorption and flow on dispersion coefficient and adsorbed density. In particular, we present a counterintuitive effect where fluid flow induces heterogeneity in the adsorbate, displacing the adsorption equilibrium towards downstream adsorption sites in grooves. We also present an improvement of the adsorption-extended lattice Boltzmann scheme by introducing the possibility for saturating Langmuir-like adsorption, while earlier work focused on linear adsorption phenomena. We then highlight the impact of this change in situations of high concentration of adsorbate.

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