Defining Injectors in the Discrete Element Method

An injector setup for DEM particles follows the Lagrangian methodology. The main difference between Lagrangian and DEM particles with respect to the injector is the concept of a particle as opposed to a parcel. For a Lagrangian phase (Material and Massless particle types) the parcel can represent many particles at once or a fraction of a particle. For DEM particles, the parcel always represents a single particle, except in the case of the Coarse Grain Particle model.

When setting up the injector, ensure that the injector injects particles into the system stress-free and does not violate the basic small overlap assumptions of the contact model: particles cannot overlap with other particles or with the wall. Particles that overlap are eliminated during injection. This condition imposes a limitation for injector flow rates when injecting particles too close to each other in space or time. As a result, the injector flow rate has a finite maximum value that depends on particle diameter, injection velocity, and distribution, as well as the unsteady iteration time.

The following injector types are compatible with DEM particles:

  • Part Injector
  • Point Injector
  • Surface Injector
  • Table Injector
  • Particle Transfer Injector—DEM particles cannot be injected by this injector type, but can be used as an input phase to the injector, to be transferred to the Lagrangian phase.

The following special injector types are available for DEM particles only:

  • Lattice Injector
  • Random Injector

See Understanding Injector Types.