IN11 


Flow Induced Instabilities and Non-Newtonian Fluids


High Weissenberg number flow alignment transitions in wormlike micelles


October 21, 2019 (Monday) 4:10


Track 4 / Room 305B

(Click on name to view author profile)

  1. Weston, Javen (University of Tulsa, Chemical Engineering)
  2. Weigandt, Katie M. (NIST Center for Neutron Research)
  3. Hudson, Steven (NIST)

(in printed abstract book)
Javen Weston1, Katie M. Weigandt2, and Steven Hudson3
1Chemical Engineering, University of Tulsa, Tulsa, OK 74104; 2NIST Center for Neutron Research, Gaithersburg, MD 20877; 3NIST, Gaithersburg, MD 20899


Weston, Javen


Simultaneous rheological measurements and Small Angle Neutron Scattering experiments were used to track segmental alignment in semi-dilute wormlike micellar solutions. As would be expected, noticeable segmental alignment begins to occur at Wi ˜ 1 for all tested solutions However, the alignment behavior deviates greatly from sample to sample at higher Wi. Additionally, all of the samples exhibit a peak in segmental alignment at some critical shear rate, above which a sometimes sharp decrease in alignment is observed. The transition appears to be the result of an elastic instability resulting from the curved streamlines present in the Taylor-Couette geometry, but is also affected by the microstructural properties of the micellar solutions. The phenomenon was investigated using a variety of sample geometries and the alignment transition was seen to follow the Pakdel-Mckinley criterion predicting flow instability for viscoelastic fluids. Here, we present work attempting to tie the microstructural properties of the micellar solutions directly to the observed high-Wi transitions in segmental alignment and apparent viscosity. and how various factors affect that transition in order to provide insight into the structure-property relationship in the high shear rate regime for this commercially-relevant system. We also present results showing similar peaks in segmental alignment observed in a microfluidic slit rheometer where the samples are undergoing Poiseuille flow. In this flow cell a peak in alignment is observed in the near-wall region of the slit where the maximum shear rate is observed. Understanding the viscoelastic properties and flow-induced structure of these micelles is beneficial for their use in personal care, oil recovery, and other applications. The system studied here is a useful model, since the micelle alignment is relatively easy to interpret and the formulation is similar to commercial consumer cleansers.