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Journal of Rheology

Volume 46, Issue 1 (January-February 2002)


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Contents

Categorization of rheological scaling models for particle gels applied to casein gels
M. Mellema, J. H. J. van Opheusden, and T. van Vliet
An invariant-based optimal fitting closure approximation for the numerical prediction of flow-induced fiber orientation
Du Hwan Chung and Tai Hun Kwon
A Rouse-like model of liquid crystalline polymer melts: Director dynamics and linear viscoelasticity
Didier Long and David C. Morse
Investigation of the solid-liquid transition of highly concentrated suspensions in oscillatory amplitude sweeps
Lutz Heymann, Sigrid Peukert and Nuri Aksel
Laser Doppler velocimetry measurements of particle velocity fluctuations in a concentrated suspension
Nina C. Shapley, Robert C. Armstrong, and Robert A. Brown
Elongational flow of a liquid crystalline polymer solution under a transverse electric field
I-Kuan Yang
Rheological behavior of HMHEC solutions: A linear viscoelastic model
A. Maestro, C. González, and J. M. Gutiérrez
Rate-dependent plasticity models derived from potential functions
G. T. Houlsby and A. M. Puzrin
Slip at polymer-polymer interfaces: Rheological measurements on coextruded multilayers
Rui Zhao and Christopher W. Macosko
Molecular weight distribution from viscoelastic data - the importance of tube renewal and Rouse modes
Frédéric Léonardi, Ahmed Allal, and Gérard Marin
Rheological properties and adhesive failure of thin viscoelastic layers
A. J. Crosby, K. R. Shull, Y. Y. Lin, and C.-Y. Hui
Simple shear and small amplitude oscillatory rectilinear shear permeation flows of cholesteric liquid crystals
Alejandro D. Rey
Nonlinear rheology of hyperbranched polyisobutylene
C. G. Robertson, C. M. Roland, and J. E. Puskas
Cone angle effects, radial pressure profile, and second normal stress difference for shear-thickening wormlike micelles
J.-Y. Lee, J. J. Magda, H. Hu, and R. G. Larson
Transient normal stress response in a concentrated suspension of spherical particles
Venkata Giri Kolli, Emily J. Pollauf, and Francis Gadala-Maria
Transient response of concentrated suspensions after shear reversal
T. Narumi, H. See, Y. Honma, T. Takahashi, T. Hasegawa, and N. Phan-Thien
A triaxial rheometer for soft compressible solids
Mårten Alkhagen and Staffan Toll

Categorization of rheological scaling models for particle gels applied to casein gels

M. Mellemaa), J. H. J. van Opheusdenb) and T. van Vliet
Food Physics, Wageningen University
P.O. Box 8129, 6700 EV Wageningen
The Netherlands

Abstract

Rennet-induced casein gels made from skim milk have been studied rheologically. A scaling model constituting a framework for describing the rheological behavior of gels is discussed and used for classification of the structure of the casein gels. There are two main parameters in the model, describing the number of deformable links in a strand and the link bendability. In the model at least five types of gel structure can be distinguished.

Application of the model to experimental data on rennet-induced casein gels at pH 6.0-6.6 and 25°C, shows that these contain straight strands with a high number of deformable links. Analysis of experimental data of the storage modulus, maximum linear strain and yield stress as a function of volume fraction, results in the same information about the gel structure.

a) To whom correspondence should be addressed. Currently working at: Unilever Research Vlaardingen, P.O. Box 114, 3130 AC Vlaardingen, The Netherlands.
b) Mathematical and statistical methods, Wageningen University, Dreijenlaan 4, 6703 HA Wageningen, The Netherlands.

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An invariant-based optimal fitting closure approximation for the numerical prediction of flow-induced fiber orientation

Du Hwan Chung and Tai Hun Kwona)
Department of Mechanical Engineering,
Pohang University of Science and Technology,
San 31 Hyojadong Nam-ku, Pohang, Kyungbuk, 790-784, Korea

Abstract

A new invariant-based optimal fitting (IBOF) closure approximation is proposed to approximate the fourth order structural orientation tensor in terms of the second order structural orientation tensor and its invariants. IBOF adopts the most general expression of a full symmetric fourth order tensor using a symmetric second order tensor and an identity tensor. The six coefficients that appear in the expression are represented using polynomial expansions in terms of the second and third invariants of the second order orientation tensor, similar to the natural (NAT) closure approximation. Unknown parameters in the polynomial expansions are determined following the method introduced by an orthotropic fitted closure approximation, which is a least-square optimization fitting technique of various flow data generated from solutions of the probability distribution function. IBOF is a hybrid of the NAT and the orthotropic fitted approximations, which are types of eigenvalue-based optimal fitting (EBOF) closure approximations. The accuracy of IBOF is as good as EBOF, and IBOF requires less computational time to obtain a solution. Also, IBOF does not suffer from the singularity problems encountered when using the NAT approximations.

a) To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: thkwon@postech.ac.kr

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A Rouse-like model of liquid crystalline polymer melts: Director dynamics and linear viscoelasticity

Didier Long and David C. Morse
Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science
University of Minnesota
421 Washington Ave. S.E., Minneapolis, MN 55455

Abstract

We describe the linear viscoelastic response and dynamics of director orientation in monodomains of unentangled nematic liquid crystalline polymers (LCPs), using a Rouse-like model appropriate to polymers with a significant degree of backbone flexibility, such as segmented main-chain thermotropic LCPs and side-chain LCPs. We consider the limits of: i) main-chain directed polymers, for which the polymer backbone is extended along the director, with no hairpins, but executes a random walk in the plane perpendicular to the director, and ii) anisotropic Gaussian polymers, for which the backbone executes an anisotropic three dimensional random walk, as for main-chain LCPs with many hairpins and many side-chain LCPs. The analysis is based upon the assumption that, in fluids of such polymers, the distribution of nematogen orientations relaxes rapidly to a state of local equilibrium, via relatively rapid local rearrangements, which follows the slower evolution of the backbone con formation. We describe the linear response in terms of 5 independent dynamic moduli, which are time or frequency dependent generalizations of the Leslie viscosities. We find that directed chains generally tumble in steady shear flow, and that anistropic Gaussian chains flow align. In transient experiments, the coupling between director rotation and the relaxation of backbone conformations is found to lead to an overshoot of the director orientation following a step shear, and a phenomenon of "director recoil" in response to the temporary application of a magnetic aligning field.

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Investigation of the solid-liquid transition of highly concentrated suspensions in oscillatory amplitude sweeps

Lutz Heymanna), Sigrid Peukert and Nuri Aksel
Universität Bayreuth, Lehrstuhl für Technische Mechanik and Strömungsmechanik
D-95440 Bayreuth, Germany

Abstract

Suspensions of quasimonodisperse PMMA spheres with mean diameters of 4.7 mm and 3.1 mm, dispersed in a low molecular weight PDMS, were characterized using oscillatory shear amplitude sweeps. Thereby, the solid volume concentration was varied. The influence of the sample preparation, the mode of the experiment (controlled shear rate, controlled shear stress) and the parameters of the amplitude sweep such as logarithmic ramp time, measurement time, and frequency were investigated. The logarithmic ramp and the measurement time were found to be the substantial factors which especially influence the experimental results at low shear stress amplitudes. The frequency has an effect only at higher shear stress amplitudes where the material behaves linearly again.

All suspensions showed a Hookean solid behavior at low shear stress amplitudes and a Newtonian fluid behavior at high shear stress amplitudes. In the transition range between the Hookean and the Newtonian behavior the analysis of the primary shear strain-time-signal showed that the nonlinear effects were coupled with the occurrence of higher odd harmonics.

a) Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: lutz.heymann@uni-bayreuth.de

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 Laser Doppler velocimetry measurements of particle velocity fluctuations in a concentrated suspension

Nina C. Shapley, Robert C. Armstrong, and Robert A. Brown
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Department of Chemical Engineering,
Cambridge, MA 02139

Abstract

Recent statistical constitutive models of suspensions of neutrally buoyant, non-colloidal, solid spheres in Newtonian fluids suggest that the particles migrate in response to gradients in "suspension temperature," defined as the average kinetic energy contained in the particle velocity fluctuations. These models have not yet been compared systematically with experimental data. In addition, the "temperature" models assume isotropic particle velocity fluctuations, since the "suspension temperature" is given as a scalar. However, highly anisotropic particle velocity fluctuations have been observed experimentally, which suggests that a "suspension temperature" tensor is more realistic.

We use laser Doppler velocimetry (LDV) to measure particle velocity fluctuations arising from inter-particle collisions in a concentrated suspension under nearly homogeneous shear flow in a narrow-gap concentric cylinder Couette device. We compare the relative sizes of the fluctuating velocity components and determine the variation of each component with particle volume fraction and shear rate. The data indicate that the suspension temperature is anisotropic. The flow direction component is overwhelmingly the largest at every concentration and shear rate, followed in order of magnitude by the neutral-direction and velocity-gradient-direction components. Additionally, over the region of the flow accessible to measurement, each fluctuating velocity component demonstrates a distinct variation with shear rate and particle volume fraction. Finally, we explain the observed anisotropy and variation of the suspension temperature in terms of the dynamics of inter-particle interactions.

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Elongational flow of a liquid crystalline polymer solution under a transverse electric field

I-Kuan Yang
Department of Chemical Engineering,
Tunghai University, Taichung, Taiwan, R.O.C.

Abstract

The behavior of elongation flows for a liquid crystal polymer (LCP) solution under an electric field was theoretically studied using the Doi model. The behavior and the alignment of the nematic phase were found to be strongly dependent upon the mutual interactions between external fields such as the electric and flow fields. The effects of these interactions on the alignment were thoroughly examined in this study. The orientation of the nematic phase exhibits the typical behavior of the Fréedericksz transition where an abrupt change in the orientation occurs at the applied electric field above a threshold value. The results from the normal stress difference on the LCP solution indicate that this difference is attributed to the Maxwell stress effect and varies with respect to the flow direction. A dramatic reduction in this difference was found when the director of the nematic phase is switched from a direction parallel to the flow to a direction perpendicular to the flow.

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Rheological behavior of HMHEC solutions: A linear viscoelastic model

A. Maestro, C. González, and J. M. Gutiérrez
Chemical Engineering and Material Science Department, Barcelona University
c/ Martí i Franquès 1, 08028 Barcelona, Spain

Abstract

The rheological behavior of hydrophobically modified hydroxyethyl cellulose (HMHEC), an associative thickener, was studied and compared with that of hydrophobically modified ethoxylated urethanes (HEURs) and nonassociative celluloses. In contrast to HEURs, a simple Maxwell model does not fit the linear viscoelastic behavior of HMHEC. Differences are attributed to the stiffness and comb structure of HMHEC. A generalized Maxwell model with a logarithmic distribution of relaxation times is proposed, and another parameter that includes Rouse-like relaxation is added to fit behavior at high frequencies. Four parameters are needed to describe HMHEC viscoelasticity: a mean relaxation time, lM; its corresponding standard deviation, s; a plateau modulus, GN; and a viscosity at infinite frequency, h¥. Satisfactory fitting is obtained for all concentrations and temperatures in the range of frequencies studied. The sharp increase of GN with concentration indicates loop-to-bridge transitions. Temperature does not influence GN, since the reduction in the number density of elastically effective chains caused by Brownian motion masks the direct effect of temperature. The dependence of lM on temperature follows the Arrhenius equation, as does the relaxation time of HEURs, but it does not change with concentration, presumably because the comb structure of HMHEC prevents the formation of long super-chains.

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 Rate-dependent plasticity models derived from potential functions

G. T. Houlsbya)
Department of Engineering Science
Oxford University
Parks Road, Oxford OX 1 3PJ, UK

A. M. Puzrin
Faculty of Civil Engineering
Technion-Israel Institute of Technology
Haifa 32000, Israel

Abstract

In this paper we describe a method for the derivation of the constitutive behaviour of rate-dependent materials from two potential functions. Once the potentials have been specified an entirely standardized procedure can be adopted to derive the response, and no additional assumptions are necessary. There is some freedom in the choice of which potential functions to specify: the first is one of four energy potentials, and the second, which specifies the dissipative behaviour, is either the force or flow potential. The method allows alternative models to be quickly compared and set within an appropriate hierarchy. This work extends previous work on rate-independent materials, for which the force potentials takes a special form. We illustrate the method with four examples of different visco-plastic models.

a) Corresponding author.

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Slip at polymer-polymer interfaces: Rheological measurements on coextruded multilayers

Rui Zhaoa) and Christopher W. Macoskob)
Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science
University of Minnesota
421 Washington Avenue SE, Minneapolis, MN55455

Abstract

Polypropylene (PP) and polystyrene (PS) with closely matched viscosity were coextruded into 8, 32 and 64 alternating layers. The apparent steady shear viscosity of these multilayer samples was measured with an in-line slit rheometer and with a parallel plates rheometer. In both cases the apparent viscosity decreased with number of layers providing strong evidence for interfacial slip. The velocity difference across the interface (interfacial slip velocity) vs shear stress, DVI(t) was calculated from the apparent viscosity measurements. DVI(t) showed sigmoidal behavior: a region of very low slip (< 10-3 mm) at low shear stress, a strongly increasing region at t > 103 Pa followed by a linear region DVI = t/b¥. These data could be fit with a modified Ellis model. The same function fit the different number of layers and both slit and parallel plates data indicating DVI(t) is a material property of the PP/PS pair. Slip was also observed in PS/PMMA (polymethyl methacrylate) and PP/aPA (amorphous nylon) pairs. Addition of a premade P(S-b-EE) diblock copolymer to PP/PS pair was able to suppress the interfacial slip but only after enough time for sufficient block copolymers to diffuse to the interfaces. The in situ formed graft copolymer of maleated PP with aPA at the interface of PP/aPA pair directly suppressed the slip.

Our results are in qualitative agreement with the theory of Furukawa (1989) and de Gennes (1992) which predict fewer chain entanglements near the interface between two immiscible polymers, and thus a narrow region (~ interfacial width) with lower viscosity. This lower viscosity is the cause of apparent interfacial slip. Goveas and Fredrickson (1998) extended these ideas to calculate the slip in a symmetric bilayer where both bulk and interface are Newtonian. Their results are in qualitative agreement with our observation but predict a stronger slip.

Our results also indicate that the anomalously low viscosity reported by a number of researchers for immiscible polymer blends is due to interfacial slip. Blends of PP and PS show similar negative viscosity deviations to those reported but only at t > 2000 Pa. No negative deviations were found for linear viscoelastic (low stress) measurements.

a) Present address: Exxonmobil Chemical Company, 5200 Bayway Drive, Baytown, TX 77520-2101
b) To whom all correspondence should be addressed.

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Molecular weight distribution from viscoelastic data - the importance of tube renewal and Rouse modes

Frédéric Léonardi, Ahmed Allal, and Gérard Marina)
Laboratoire de Physique des Matériaux Industriels U.M.R.-CNRS 5067
Université de Pau et des Pays de 1'Adour
BP 1155 64013 Pau Cedex, France

Abstract

Rheological models based on molecular dynamics (as opposite to empirical relationships) are now preferred to link the MWD of linear polymers to their rheological properties. These models incorporate the double reptation concept, which represents the relaxation modulus as an integral over the molecular weight distribution. We propose a method that incorporates a detailed modeling of all the relevant relaxation processes, including Rouse fast and longitudinal modes and glassy relaxation. In addition, we take into account the effect of polydispersity on the relaxation times for reptation, i.e., "tube renewal". In order to demonstrate the importance of these features of our technique, we compare it with one involving the direct inversion of the double reptation integral without accounting for tube renewal and additional relaxation processes. To invert the relaxation modulus in terms of the molecular weight distribution, one must either solve the ill-posed problem using an efficient numerical algorithm or postulate a function to describe the MWD. The second approach is more robust and less sensitive to noisy data, but one must assume the form of the MWD a priori. We present a procedure for selecting this function and use it to compare the two approaches to inverting a G(t) model.

Data for several binary blends and commercial polymers are analyzed using both approaches. We conclude that the more detailed technique is necessary when the MWD is broad or when there is a significant amount of low-molecular weight material present.

a) To whom correspondence should be addressed. Email: gerard.marin@univ-pau.fr

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Rheological properties and adhesive failure of thin viscoelastic layers

A. J. Crosby and K. R. Shull
Department of Materials Science and Engineering
Northwestern University

Y. Y. Lin and C.-Y. Hui
Department of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics
Cornell University

Abstract

Methods have been developed for measuring the linear viscoelastic properties of thin adhesive layers, and for determining the stress intensity factor characterizing the driving force for adhesive failure. Both methods involve bringing a hemispherical indenter in contact with the adhesive layer while simultaneously monitoring the load, displacement and radius of contact between the indenter and the adhesive. Dynamic moduli for the adhesive layer are obtained by oscillating the indenter, and the adhesive properties are obtained by pulling the indenter completely out of contact with the adhesive layer. Existing theories of viscoelastic contact mechanics were extended to account for the fact that the adhesive layer thickness is not substantially larger than the contact radius, as is generally assumed. A variety of correction factors were introduced that depend on the ratio of the contact radius to the adhesive layer thickness. These methods were applied to a model adhesive based on an acrylic triblock copolymer. Determination of the time-dependent creep and relaxation functions for this material was simplified by the power-law frequency response of the dynamic moduli. The large stress intensity factors observed were related to a Dugdale model of the cohesive zone at the contact edge.

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Simple shear and small amplitude oscillatory rectilinear shear permeation flows of cholesteric liquid crystals

Alejandro D. Rey
Department of Chemical Engineering
McGill University
3610 University Street, Wong Building
Montreal, Quebec H3A 2B2, Canada

Abstract

A model of rod-like cholesteric liquid crystals subjected to slow steady simple shear and low frequency small amplitude oscillatory shear flow is formulated and applied to permeation flow, also known as Helfrich permeation flow (Helfrich 1969, 1970), when the cholesteric helix is oriented along the velocity direction and the orientation distortions retain the original planar chiral structure. In permeation flow the elastic forces exactly balance viscous forces. The presence of a small internal length scale (pitch of the helix) leads to boundary layer behavior in the velocity and orientation fields at any shear rate and at any driving frequency. The thickness of the boundary layer region is of the order of the pitch. The apparent viscosity is larger than typical nematic viscosities by a factor proportional to the ratio of the gap thickness to the pitch length. The effect is due to the Ericksen elastic stress. The response of cholesterics to small amplitude oscillatory shear corresponds to a purely viscous material. The out-of-phase stress component vanishes because the viscous force is exactly cancelled by the elastic force. In the terminal region, the loss modulus G" exhibits a classical frequency w dependence (G" µ w) but its magnitude is much greater than for other cholesteric flows by a factor proportional to the ratio of the gap thickness to the pitch length.

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Nonlinear rheology of hyperbranched polyisobutylene

C. G. Robertsona) and C. M. Rolandb)
Naval Research Laboratory
Chemistry Division, Code 6120
Washington, D. C. 20375-5342

J. E. Puskas
Department of Chemical & Biochemical Engineering
University of Western Ontario
London, Ontario N6A 5B9, Canada

Abstract

The nonlinear shear rheology of a hyperbranched polyisobutylene (PIB) with narrow molecular weight distribution (Mw/Mn = 1.3) was compared to that of a polydisperse (Mw/Mn = 2.5) linear PIB. After adjusting the respective measurement temperatures to yield equal shear viscosities, the rheology was found to be quite similar for the two polymers, notwithstanding their markedly different structures. These similarities persisted in capillary extrusion experiments at moderate shear rates, on the compounds reinforced with carbon black. However, at higher shear rates, the linear PIB exhibits a greater elastic response, with consequently larger extrudate swell.

a) Present address: ExxonMobil Chemical Company; Baytown, TX 77522-5200
b) Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. E- mail: mike.roland@nrl.navy.mil

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Cone angle effects, radial pressure profile, and second normal stress difference for shear-thickening wormlike micelles

J.-Y. Lee, J. J. Magda
Departments of Materials Science & Engineering
and Chemical & Fuels Engineering
University of Utah
Salt Lake City, Utah 84112-9203, USA

H. Hu, R. G. Larson
Department of Chemical Engineering
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109-2136, USA

Abstract

Many dilute surfactant solutions containing long, thin, wormlike micelles undergo a shear-thickening transition at which the apparent viscosity jumps to a much higher value due to the formation of shear-induced structures (SIS). However, the behavior of the normal stress differences N1 and N2 has not been studied at the low shear rates and shear stresses (< 0.1 Pa) at which shear thickening occurs in most of the commonly studied systems, such as aqueous solutions of cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) and sodium salicylate (NaSS). For dilute equimolar solutions of CTAB/NaSS, the validity of measurements of the shear flow properties h, N1 and N2 via cone-and-plate rheometry is assessed by systematically varying the cone angle, and by measuring the pressure profile during cone-and-plate flows. The dependence on the cone angle of the apparent viscosity value is consistent with a stratified fluid structure, as shown to occur in Couette rheometers by Hu and co-workers. However, N1 and N2 values show no obvious dependence on cone angle, and the occurrence of flow stratification is surprisingly difficult to detect from the pressure profile. As the shear rate is increased, the measured pressure profiles are suggestive of a gradual transition from viscometric to non-viscometric flow. By combining the results presented here with earlier results by Huang and co-workers, we conclude that the same wormy micelle solution exhibits at least two flow transitions that might be described as "shear-thickening". In the shear rate range of viscometric cone-and-plate flows, the measured normal stress ratio - N2/N1 for dilute solutions of CTAB/NaSS wormy micelles is similar to the value observed for moderately entangled solutions of synthetic polymers.

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Transient normal stress response in a concentrated suspension of spherical particles

Venkata Giri Kolli, Emily J. Pollauf a), and Francis Gadala-Mariab)
Department of Chemical Engineering
University of South Carolina
Columbia, SC 29208

Abstract

The transient normal force response in a concentrated suspension of spherical particles upon startup of shear, following a period of rest, was found to depend on the direction in which shear was restarted. When shear was restarted in the same direction, the normal force signal rapidly grew to its previous positive steady-state value. However, when shear was restarted in the opposite direction, the normal force signal was initially negative and decreased, within the response time of the instrument, to a negative minimum, from which it gradually increased, passing through zero, to its steady-state value. This is believed to be the first experimental confirmation of this phenomenon, which had been suggested by the numerical simulations of previous investigators.

a) Present Address: Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801.
b) Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. E- mail: gadala-m@engr.sc.edu

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Transient response of concentrated suspensions after shear reversal

T. Narumia,e), H. Seeb), Y. Honmaa), T. Takahashic),
T. Hasegawaa), and N. Phan-Thiend)

a) Department of Mechanical and Production Engineering
Niigata University
8050 2-no-cho Ikarashi, Niigata 950-2181, Japan

b) Department of Chemical Engineering
The University of Sydney
NSW 2006, Sydney, Australia

c) Department of Mechanical Engineering
Nagaoka University of Technology
1603-1 Kamitomioka, Nagaoka, Niigata 940-2188, Japan

d) School of Aerospace, Mechanical and Mechatronic Engineering
The University of Sydney
NSW 2006, Sydney, Australia

Abstract

We have examined the transient stress response under shear flow of concentrated suspensions of non-Brownian spheres. We focussed on the experiment where the shearing is momentarily stopped and re-started in the opposite direction. We found that the normalised stress recovery curves for different values of the initial and subsequent shear rates could be collapsed quite well if plotted against the strain. This behaviour agrees with the basic concept that the transient stress behaviour is a function only of the imposed strain, as predicted by some recent constitutive models of concentrated suspensions. We also found that the transient behaviour of the normal stress difference showed similar data collapse. Further, there appeared to be little qualitative difference in the behaviour of particulate systems with a high degree of size monodispersity and those more polydisperse.

e) To whom correspondence should be addressed.

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A triaxial rheometer for soft compressible solids

Mårten Alkhagen and Staffan Toll
Department of Applied Mechanics
Chalmers University of Technology
SE-412 96 Gothenburg, Sweden
and
School of Textiles
University College of Borås
SE-50190 Borås, Sweden

Abstract

The novel instrument measures the response to compression and shear of a class of materials we call soft compressible solids, examples of which are textile solids and foams. The sample is fixed between two parallel plates, and deformation is controlled by an x, y, z-displacement on one plate while the stress is measured on the other. A key component is the triaxial stress transducer, which eliminates edge-effects by only measuring the stress on an interior region of the plate. The edge effects and associated measurement errors are analysed by simple isotropic elasticity theory, and compared to measurements done on chloroprene rubber foam.

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