Many important engineering and scientific applications such as cement slurries, foams, crude oil, and granular avalanches involve the concept of yield stress. Therefore, modeling yield stress fluids in different flow configurations, including the accurate prediction of the yield surface, is important. In this paper, we present a computational model based on the finite element method to study the flow of yield stress fluids in a thin mold and compare the results with data from flow visualization experiments. We use the level set method to describe the interface between the filling fluid and air. We use polypropylene glycol as a model Newtonian fluid and Carbopol for the model yield stress fluid, as the Carbopol solution demonstrates yielding without thixotropy. To describe the yielding and shear-thinning behavior, we use a generalized Newtonian constitutive equation with a Bingham–Carreau–Yasuda form. We compare the results obtained from the mold filling experiments with the results from the three-dimensional (3D) model and from a reduced-order Hele-Shaw (HS) model that is two-dimensional, including the effect of shear-thinning along the thin direction only approximately. We show that both the 3D and the HS model can capture the experimental meniscus shape reasonably well for all the fluids considered at three different flow rates. This indicates that the shape evolution is insensitive to the dimensionality of the model. However, the viscosity and yield surfaces predicted by the 3D and HS models are different. The HS model underestimates the high viscosity and unyielded regions compared to the estimation by the 3D model.
CITATION STYLE
Dey, B., Ortiz, W., Cleaves, H., McMaster, A., McConnell, J., Tjiptowidjojo, K., … Rao, R. R. (2023). A level set approach for the computational study of a yield stress fluid filling a thin mold. Journal of Non-Newtonian Fluid Mechanics, 312. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jnnfm.2022.104987
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