AE31B-0441
Electrification of Shaken Granular Flows as a Model of Natural Storm Charging
Wednesday, 16 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Onur Kara1, Freja Nordsiek1 and Daniel Perry Lathrop2, (1)University of Maryland College Park, College Park, MD, United States, (2)Univ of Maryland, College Park, MD, United States
Abstract:
The charging of particulates in nature is widespread and observed in thunderstorms, volcanic ash clouds, thunder-snow, and dust storms. However the mechanism of charge separation at large (> 1km) scale is poorly understood. We perform simple laboratory experiments to better understand the collective phenomena involved in granular electrification. We confine granular particles in an oscillating cylindrical chamber which is enclosed and sealed by two conducting plates. The primary measurement is the voltage difference between the two plates. We find that collective effects occurring in the bulk of the material play a significant role in the electrification process. We extend that by addition of photodetection capabilities to the experimental chamber to detect electrical discharges between the particles and each other and the plates. We present measurements of electrical discharges in addition to the slower dynamics of voltage variation in the system.