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Main Authors: Hashimoto, Arata, Mitani, Ryosuke, Imatani, Toshiki, Sakai, Mikio
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.20040
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author Hashimoto, Arata
Mitani, Ryosuke
Imatani, Toshiki
Sakai, Mikio
author_facet Hashimoto, Arata
Mitani, Ryosuke
Imatani, Toshiki
Sakai, Mikio
contents Particle entrainment in confined gas-particle systems driven by moving boundaries is central to many industrial and natural processes, including pharmaceutical manufacturing, food processing, and chemical engineering. Although often termed a "suction effect," its physical origin remains unclear, especially under unsteady flow, strong particle interactions, and transient force networks. Here we study suction-induced entrainment in a prototypical confined system using high-fidelity coupled CFD-DEM simulations resolving unsteady gas flow and discrete particle motion with moving boundaries. By decomposing the forces on individual particles, we show that suction is not purely pressure-driven, but results from the combined action of pressure-gradient and unsteady drag forces generated by boundary-accelerated flow. Despite the heterogeneous and transient force fields, the final entrained mass is found to be governed primarily by a single energetic measure: the mechanical work performed on the particle assembly in the entrainment direction during boundary motion, rather than by peak instantaneous forces. Varying boundary kinematics demonstrates that changes in displacement or velocity history control entrainment mainly by modifying the duration over which fluid-particle forces perform work. These results reveal an organizing principle for suction-driven entrainment and establish a work-based framework for boundary-induced particle transport in confined gas-particle systems.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2601_20040
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Mechanisms of particle entrainment in confined gas-particle systems under moving boundaries
Hashimoto, Arata
Mitani, Ryosuke
Imatani, Toshiki
Sakai, Mikio
Fluid Dynamics
Particle entrainment in confined gas-particle systems driven by moving boundaries is central to many industrial and natural processes, including pharmaceutical manufacturing, food processing, and chemical engineering. Although often termed a "suction effect," its physical origin remains unclear, especially under unsteady flow, strong particle interactions, and transient force networks. Here we study suction-induced entrainment in a prototypical confined system using high-fidelity coupled CFD-DEM simulations resolving unsteady gas flow and discrete particle motion with moving boundaries. By decomposing the forces on individual particles, we show that suction is not purely pressure-driven, but results from the combined action of pressure-gradient and unsteady drag forces generated by boundary-accelerated flow. Despite the heterogeneous and transient force fields, the final entrained mass is found to be governed primarily by a single energetic measure: the mechanical work performed on the particle assembly in the entrainment direction during boundary motion, rather than by peak instantaneous forces. Varying boundary kinematics demonstrates that changes in displacement or velocity history control entrainment mainly by modifying the duration over which fluid-particle forces perform work. These results reveal an organizing principle for suction-driven entrainment and establish a work-based framework for boundary-induced particle transport in confined gas-particle systems.
title Mechanisms of particle entrainment in confined gas-particle systems under moving boundaries
topic Fluid Dynamics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.20040