The dissipation rate due to inelastic collisions between equally charged,
insulating particles in a granular gas is calculated. It is equal to the known
dissipation rate for uncharged granular media multiplied by a Boltzmann-like
factor, that originates from Coulomb repulsion. Particle correlations lead to
an effective potential that replaces the bare Coulomb potential in the
Boltzmann factor. Collisional cooling in a granular gas proceeds with the known
t^-2 -law, until the kinetic energy of the grains becomes smaller than the
Coulomb barrier. Then the granular temperature approaches a time dependence
proportional to 1/ln(t). If the particles have different charges of equal sign,
the collision rate can always be lowered by redistributing the charge, until
all particles carry the same charge. Finally granular flow through a vertical
pipe is briefly discussed. All results are confirmed by computer simulations.Comment: Submitted to "Granular Matter