This study focuses on the demixing of neutrally buoyant suspensions of spheres during slow, pressure driven Bows in circular conduits. Distributions of the solid fraction of particles, phi, and the suspension velocity, v, are measured at different lengths from a static in-line mixer. Experiments were conducted over a range of volume average solids fractions, phi(bulk) (0.10 less than or equal to phi less than or equal to 0.50), and at two different ratios of the particle radius, a, to the radius of the circular conduit, R (a/R = 0.0256 and a/R = 0.0625). At phi(bulk) greater than or equal to 0.20, the particles rapidly migrate to the low-shear-rate region in the center of the conduit. This migration results in a blunting of the v profile, relative to the parabolic profile observed in homogeneous Newtonian fluids. For the flow geometry with the smaller ratio of a/R, the phi profile builds to a sharp maximum or cusp in the center. Particle structures are observed in the experiments with the higher a/R. The entrance lengths for the development of the phi and v fields, L-phi and L-v, respectively, are strong functions of a/R and phi(bulk). L-phi and L-v rapidly decrease as phi and a/R increase. Over the range of our data, the v profiles are observed to develop more rapidly than the phi profiles. The experimental results are compared with fully developed flow predictions from the shear-induced migration (SIM) model and the suspension balance (SE) model. At the smaller a/R, the SIM model more accurately predicts the experimental results. At larger a/R, some qualitative features of the experimental results are better predicted by the SE model, however, neither model provides good quantitative predictions,especially at low phi(bulk). (C) 1997 The Society of Rheology.