This paper considers the segregation of a granular mixture in a rotating
drum. Extending a recent kinematic model for grain transport on sandpile
surfaces to the case of rotating drums, an analysis is presented for radial
segregation in the rolling regime, where a thin layer is avalanching down while
the rest of the material follows rigid body rotation. We argue that segregation
is driven not just by differences in the angle of repose of the species, as has
been assumed in earlier investigations, but also by differences in the size and
surface properties of the grains. The cases of grains differing only in size
(slightly or widely) and only in surface properties are considered, and the
predictions are in qualitative agreement with observations. The model yields
results inconsistent with the assumptions for more general cases, and we
speculate on how this may be corrected.Comment: 12 pages inclusive of 10 PostScript (*.eps) figures, uses svjour,
psfrag and graphicx. Submitted for publication to Euro. Phys. J.