A particle dynamics-based hybrid model, consisting of monodisperse spherical
solid particles and volume-averaged gas hydrodynamics, is used to study
traveling planar waves (one-dimensional traveling waves) of voids formed in
gas-fluidized beds of narrow cross sectional areas. Through ensemble-averaging
in a co-traveling frame, we compute solid phase continuum variables (local
volume fraction, average velocity, stress tensor, and granular temperature)
across the waves, and examine the relations among them. We probe the
consistency between such computationally obtained relations and constitutive
models in the kinetic theory for granular materials which are widely used in
the two-fluid modeling approach to fluidized beds. We demonstrate that solid
phase continuum variables exhibit appreciable ``path dependence'', which is not
captured by the commonly used kinetic theory-based models. We show that this
path dependence is associated with the large rates of dilation and compaction
that occur in the wave. We also examine the relations among solid phase
continuum variables in beds of cohesive particles, which yield the same path
dependence. Our results both for beds of cohesive and non-cohesive particles
suggest that path-dependent constitutive models need to be developed.Comment: accepted for publication in Physics of Fluids (Burnett-order effect
analysis added