Time-resolved Linear and Non-linear Rheology of Thixotropic and Aging Complex Fluids

Time-resolved Linear and Non-linear Rheology of Thixotropic and Aging Complex Fluids PDF Author: Joshua David John Rathinaraj
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 177

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Book Description
Temporal changes in microstructure and relaxation dynamics are ubiquitously observed in materials such as hydrogels, food products and drilling fluids. These materials are in general known as mutating materials and the build-up or breakdown of microstructure is commonly both time- and shear-rate (or shear-stress)-dependent resulting in a range of complex phenomena collected under the term thixotropy. It is becoming increasingly im- portant to develop time-resolved rheometric techniques to quantify the behavior of mutating materials accurately. In the present study we first discuss the introduction of better time-resolved techniques in superposition rheometry. Conventional superposition rheometry consists of combining Small Amplitude Oscillatory Shear (SAOS) with a steady unidirectional shear rate to gain insight into the shear-induced changes to the viscoelastic properties of a complex fluid. Orthogonal superposition (OSP), in which the two modes of deformation are perpendicular, has been preferred over parallel superposition to avoid non-linear cross-coupling of the steady shear and oscillatory deformation fields. This cross coupling can lead to unphysi- cal sign changes in the measured material properties, and makes it difficult to interpret the flow-induced mechanical properties. Recently, orthogonal superposition has been used to investigate the shear-induced anisotropy taking place in colloidal gels by comparing the transient evolution of orthogonal moduli with the parallel moduli immediately after cessa- tion of shear. However, probing transient evolution using the OSP technique can be chal- lenging for rapidly mutating complex materials which evolve on time scales comparable to the time scale of the experiment. Using a weakly associated alginate gel, we demonstrate the potential of superimposing fast optimally windowed chirp (OWCh) deformations or- thogonally to the shear deformation which substantially reduces the measurement time. We evaluate the changes in the rate-dependent relaxation spectrum in the direction of applied unidirectional shear rate and in the orthogonal direction deduced from the damping function and orthogonal moduli data respectively. We measure systematic changes between the two spectra measured in orthogonal directions thus revealing and quantifying flow-induced anisotropy in the alginate gel. Secondly, we develop a signal processing technique to monitor accurate temporal evolution of the complex modulus for a specified deformation frequency. Oscillatory rheometric techniques such as Small Amplitude Oscillatory Shear (SAOS) and, more recently, Large Amplitude Oscillatory Shear (LAOS) are now quite widely used for rheological characterization of the viscoelastic properties of complex fluids. However, the conventional application of Fourier transforms for analyzing oscillatory data assume the signals are time- translation invariant, which constrains the rate of mutation of the material to be extremely small. This constraint makes it difficult to accurately study shear-induced microstructural changes in thixotropic and gelling materials. We explore applications of the Gabor transform (a Short Time Fourier Transform (STFT) combined with a Gaussian window), for providing optimal joint time-frequency resolution of a mutating material's viscoelastic properties. First, we show using simple analytic models that application of the STFT enables extraction of useful data from the initial transient response following the inception of oscillatory flow. Secondly, using measurements on a Bentonite clay we show that using a Gabor transform enables us to more accurately measure rapid changes in both the storage and loss modulus with time, and also extract a characteristic thixotropic/aging time scale for the material. Finally, we consider extension of the Gabor transform to non-linear oscillatory deformations using an amplitude-modulated input strain signal, in order to track the evolution of the Fourier-Chebyshev coefficients characterizing thixotropic fluids at a specified deformation frequency. We show that there is a trade-off between frequency and time resolution (effectively a rheological uncertainty principle). We refer to the resulting test proto col as Gaborheometry and construct an operability diagram in terms of the imposed ramp rate and the mutation time of the material. This unconventional, but easily implemented, rheometric approach facilitates both SAOS and LAOS studies of time-evolving materials, reducing the number of required experiments and the data post-processing time significantly. Finally, we use the time-resolved techniques developed in this thesis to understand the thixotropic aging behavior of bentonite dispersions. In soft glassy materials such as ben- tonite clays, the relaxation dynamics and the microstructure slowly but continuously evolve with time to progressively form more stable structures. We investigate and quantify this complex aging behavior of bentonite dispersions by measuring the evolution in the linear viscoelastic behavior at different age times and temperatures. We model the linear viscoelastic properties using a material time domain transformation and a fractional Maxwell gel model which allows us to develop a rheological master curve to quantify and predict the aging behavior of this soft glass over a range of temperatures and time scales. The time-resolved rheometric techniques and procedures for quantifying the rheology of rapidly mutating complex fluids can be extended to a wide range of soft materials and allows us to obtain insight into how microstructural changes drive the evolution in the bulk rheological behavior for thixotropic and aging materials.

Time-resolved Linear and Non-linear Rheology of Thixotropic and Aging Complex Fluids

Time-resolved Linear and Non-linear Rheology of Thixotropic and Aging Complex Fluids PDF Author: Joshua David John Rathinaraj
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 177

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Book Description
Temporal changes in microstructure and relaxation dynamics are ubiquitously observed in materials such as hydrogels, food products and drilling fluids. These materials are in general known as mutating materials and the build-up or breakdown of microstructure is commonly both time- and shear-rate (or shear-stress)-dependent resulting in a range of complex phenomena collected under the term thixotropy. It is becoming increasingly im- portant to develop time-resolved rheometric techniques to quantify the behavior of mutating materials accurately. In the present study we first discuss the introduction of better time-resolved techniques in superposition rheometry. Conventional superposition rheometry consists of combining Small Amplitude Oscillatory Shear (SAOS) with a steady unidirectional shear rate to gain insight into the shear-induced changes to the viscoelastic properties of a complex fluid. Orthogonal superposition (OSP), in which the two modes of deformation are perpendicular, has been preferred over parallel superposition to avoid non-linear cross-coupling of the steady shear and oscillatory deformation fields. This cross coupling can lead to unphysi- cal sign changes in the measured material properties, and makes it difficult to interpret the flow-induced mechanical properties. Recently, orthogonal superposition has been used to investigate the shear-induced anisotropy taking place in colloidal gels by comparing the transient evolution of orthogonal moduli with the parallel moduli immediately after cessa- tion of shear. However, probing transient evolution using the OSP technique can be chal- lenging for rapidly mutating complex materials which evolve on time scales comparable to the time scale of the experiment. Using a weakly associated alginate gel, we demonstrate the potential of superimposing fast optimally windowed chirp (OWCh) deformations or- thogonally to the shear deformation which substantially reduces the measurement time. We evaluate the changes in the rate-dependent relaxation spectrum in the direction of applied unidirectional shear rate and in the orthogonal direction deduced from the damping function and orthogonal moduli data respectively. We measure systematic changes between the two spectra measured in orthogonal directions thus revealing and quantifying flow-induced anisotropy in the alginate gel. Secondly, we develop a signal processing technique to monitor accurate temporal evolution of the complex modulus for a specified deformation frequency. Oscillatory rheometric techniques such as Small Amplitude Oscillatory Shear (SAOS) and, more recently, Large Amplitude Oscillatory Shear (LAOS) are now quite widely used for rheological characterization of the viscoelastic properties of complex fluids. However, the conventional application of Fourier transforms for analyzing oscillatory data assume the signals are time- translation invariant, which constrains the rate of mutation of the material to be extremely small. This constraint makes it difficult to accurately study shear-induced microstructural changes in thixotropic and gelling materials. We explore applications of the Gabor transform (a Short Time Fourier Transform (STFT) combined with a Gaussian window), for providing optimal joint time-frequency resolution of a mutating material's viscoelastic properties. First, we show using simple analytic models that application of the STFT enables extraction of useful data from the initial transient response following the inception of oscillatory flow. Secondly, using measurements on a Bentonite clay we show that using a Gabor transform enables us to more accurately measure rapid changes in both the storage and loss modulus with time, and also extract a characteristic thixotropic/aging time scale for the material. Finally, we consider extension of the Gabor transform to non-linear oscillatory deformations using an amplitude-modulated input strain signal, in order to track the evolution of the Fourier-Chebyshev coefficients characterizing thixotropic fluids at a specified deformation frequency. We show that there is a trade-off between frequency and time resolution (effectively a rheological uncertainty principle). We refer to the resulting test proto col as Gaborheometry and construct an operability diagram in terms of the imposed ramp rate and the mutation time of the material. This unconventional, but easily implemented, rheometric approach facilitates both SAOS and LAOS studies of time-evolving materials, reducing the number of required experiments and the data post-processing time significantly. Finally, we use the time-resolved techniques developed in this thesis to understand the thixotropic aging behavior of bentonite dispersions. In soft glassy materials such as ben- tonite clays, the relaxation dynamics and the microstructure slowly but continuously evolve with time to progressively form more stable structures. We investigate and quantify this complex aging behavior of bentonite dispersions by measuring the evolution in the linear viscoelastic behavior at different age times and temperatures. We model the linear viscoelastic properties using a material time domain transformation and a fractional Maxwell gel model which allows us to develop a rheological master curve to quantify and predict the aging behavior of this soft glass over a range of temperatures and time scales. The time-resolved rheometric techniques and procedures for quantifying the rheology of rapidly mutating complex fluids can be extended to a wide range of soft materials and allows us to obtain insight into how microstructural changes drive the evolution in the bulk rheological behavior for thixotropic and aging materials.

Rheology of Complex Fluids

Rheology of Complex Fluids PDF Author: Abhijit P. Deshpande
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
ISBN: 1441964940
Category : Technology & Engineering
Languages : en
Pages : 259

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Book Description
The aim of the School on Rheology of Complex fluids is to bring together young researchers and teachers from educational and R&D institutions, and expose them to the basic concepts and research techniques used in the study of rheological behavior of complex fluids. The lectures will be delivered by well-recognized experts. The book contents will be based on the lecture notes of the school.

The Linear and Nonlinear Rheology of Multiscale Complex Fluids

The Linear and Nonlinear Rheology of Multiscale Complex Fluids PDF Author: Aditya Jaishankar
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 337

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Book Description
The microstructures of many complex fluids are typically characterized by a broad distribution of internal length scales. Examples of such multiscale materials include physically and chemically cross-linked gels, emulsions, soft colloidal glasses and concentrated suspensions. Due to the complex microstructure, these materials exhibit multiscale power law relaxation under externally imposed deformation. Compact constitutive frameworks that can accurately describe and predict both the linear as well as the nonlinear rheology of such complex fluids have remained elusive. Moreover, the rheological behavior of these materials under extensional deformations, which is important in applications such as spraying and fiber spinning, is relatively poorly understood. The primary contribution of this thesis is the development of a compact constitutive modeling framework to quantitatively describe the rheology of multiscale complex fluids. In the linear limit of small deformations, fractional constitutive equations in conjunction with the concept of quasi-properties have been shown to provide accurate physical descriptions of the broad power law relaxation dynamics exhibited by multiscale materials. In this thesis we very generally show how fractional constitutive equations enable the prediction of the rheological response of multiscale fluids under complex deformation profiles. As a specific example, we analyze the damped inertio-elastic oscillations exhibited at early times by viscoelastic interfacial layers upon the imposition of a constant stress, and the subsequent long time power law creep. We also analyze the small strain lubrication flow regime of a typical tack experiment performed on a crosslinked power law gel, where the extensional deformation of the complex material plays an important role. We extend these models to the large strain nonlinear regime using an integral K-BKZ framework coupled with a strain damping function. We demonstrate in a general manner that nonlinear rheological responses such as shear-thinning and positive first normal stress coefficients can be predicted a priori from linear viscoelastic data and a single additional nonlinear parameter introduced through the damping function. We also demonstrate that well-known empirical rheological models utilized to describe nonlinear behavior such as the Herschel-Bulkley, Cross and Carreau models can be derived using the K-BKZ framework by selecting a suitable fractional relaxation kernel and an appropriate damping function. Additionally, we derive expressions for linear viscometric functions as well as the first normal stress coefficient for materials that exhibit steady shear flow behavior predicted by the above empirical models. Our approach also quantifies the applicability of widely known empirical rheological rules for nonlinear rheology such as the Cox-Merz rule. The second contribution of this thesis is in increasing the understanding of the rheological behavior of multiscale complex fluids in extensional flow fields. For this purpose we utilize a variety of experimental extensional rheology techniques such as Capillary Breakup Extensional Rheometry (CaBER), Filament Stretching Extensional Rheometry (FiSER) and an Optimized Shape Cross-slot Extensional Rheometer (OSCER). Due to their ubiquity in industrial applications as well as in biologically relevant complex fluids, we primarily study aqueous polysaccharide systems (for example Mamaku gum). With the help of these detailed experiments, we investigate and quantify the strength of hydrogen-bonding interactions in this multiscale physically associated gel. We also investigate the extensional rheology of Hyaluronic acid, which has been shown to be an important factor in proper synovial fluid function. The findings of this thesis are widely applicable given the widespread use of multiscale complex fluids in industrial, and biological applications. The fractional constitutive framework derived here overcomes the limitations of current modeling approaches that invoke a large number of empirical constitutive parameters. Our simple models will be useful for quantitative material diagnostics and quality control comparisons as well as for computational simulations. Moreover, the experimental findings on the extensional rheology of multiscale polysaccharide systems will help in the formulation of biologically relevant complex fluids for the treatment of physiological conditions such as osteoarthritis and dysphagia.

Role of Viscoelasticity and Non-linear Rheology in Flows of Complex Fluids at High Deformation Rates

Role of Viscoelasticity and Non-linear Rheology in Flows of Complex Fluids at High Deformation Rates PDF Author: Thomas Joseph Ober
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 399

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Book Description
We combine pressure, velocimetry and birefringence measurements to study three phenomena for which the fluid rheology plays a dominant role: 1) shear banding in micellar fluids, 2) extension-dominated flows in microfluidic devices, and 3) flow-induced particle migration in microchannels. Firstly, worm-like micellar solutions are model non-Newtonian fluids having a single relaxation time [beta]. At shear rates larger than ... however, these systems exhibit shear banding and non-linear rheological behavior, whose importance is characterized by the Weissenberg number ... We develop a stability criterion for the onset of a purely viscoelastic instability for shear-banding fluids, to establish the limitations of conventional rheometric techniques for studying these fluids. A second challenge for conventional rheometers is inertially-driven secondary flows. The onset of these flows is governed by the Reynolds number ... where U is the velocity, D is the flow geometry length and v is the fluid kinematic viscosity. We develop microfluidic devices to impose shear and extensional deformation rates up to ...at low Re. These experiments combine pressure measurements, micro-particle image velocimetry ([mu]-PIV) and birefringence measurements. We develop a microfluidic chip that enables applied rheologists to quantitatively differentiate between fluid formulations intended for applications at high deformation rates. Finally, we study the interplay between fluid inertia and elasticity on particle migration. The inertially-dominated case is governed by the channel Reynolds number Re, and particle Reynolds number ... where a is the particle diameter. In a microfluidic device, the particle and channel size are on the same order, and hence migration occurs at ... in the so-called 'inertial focusing' regime which may have applications in clinical medicine. However, most physiological fluids are viscoelastic and therefore particle migration in these fluids occurs at high Reynolds and Weissenberg numbers, which is a mostly unstudied regime. We combine pressure measurements, streak imaging, [my]-PIV and particle trajectory analysis (PTA) to study the migration of polystyrene beads. Inertia drives particles toward the channel walls, whereas elasticity drives particles toward the channel centerline even at Re, ~ 2000.

Time-resolved Rheology on Complex Fluids

Time-resolved Rheology on Complex Fluids PDF Author: V. I. Markmann
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : de
Pages :

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Book Description


Nonlinear Rheological Characterization and Modeling of Complex Fluids Under Large Amplitude Oscillatory Shear (LAOS)

Nonlinear Rheological Characterization and Modeling of Complex Fluids Under Large Amplitude Oscillatory Shear (LAOS) PDF Author: Christopher Joseph Hershey
Publisher:
ISBN: 9780438329324
Category : Electronic dissertations
Languages : en
Pages : 116

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Book Description


Structural Glasses and Supercooled Liquids

Structural Glasses and Supercooled Liquids PDF Author: Peter G. Wolynes
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
ISBN: 0470452234
Category : Science
Languages : en
Pages : 422

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Book Description
With contributions from 24 global experts in diverse fields, and edited by world-recognized leaders in physical chemistry, chemical physics and biophysics, Structural Glasses and Supercooled Liquids: Theory, Experiment, and Applications presents a modern, complete survey of glassy phenomena in many systems based on firmly established characteristics of the underlying molecular motions as deduced by first principle theoretical calculations, or with direct/single-molecule experimental techniques. A well-rounded view of a variety of disordered systems where cooperative phenomena, which are epitomized by supercooled liquids, take place is provided. These systems include structural glasses and supercooled liquids, polymers, complex liquids, protein conformational dynamics, and strongly interacting electron systems with quenched/self-generated disorder. Detailed calculations and reasoned arguments closely corresponding with experimental data are included, making the book accessible to an educated non-expert reader.

Colloidal Suspension Rheology

Colloidal Suspension Rheology PDF Author: Jan Mewis
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
ISBN: 0521515998
Category : Science
Languages : en
Pages : 417

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Book Description
Presented in an accessible and introductory manner, this is the first book devoted to the comprehensive study of colloidal suspensions.

Dynamical Heterogeneities in Glasses, Colloids, and Granular Media

Dynamical Heterogeneities in Glasses, Colloids, and Granular Media PDF Author: Ludovic Berthier
Publisher: OUP Oxford
ISBN: 0191621307
Category : Science
Languages : en
Pages : 562

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Book Description
Most of the solid materials we use in everyday life, from plastics to cosmetic gels exist under a non-crystalline, amorphous form: they are glasses. Yet, we are still seeking a fundamental explanation as to what glasses really are and to why they form. In this book, we survey the most recent theoretical and experimental research dealing with glassy physics, from molecular to colloidal glasses and granular media. Leading experts in this field present broad and original perspectives on one of the deepest mysteries of condensed matter physics, with an emphasis on the key role played by heterogeneities in the dynamics of glassiness.

Theory and Applications of Colloidal Suspension Rheology

Theory and Applications of Colloidal Suspension Rheology PDF Author: Norman J. Wagner
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
ISBN: 1108423035
Category : Science
Languages : en
Pages : 437

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Book Description
Essential text on the practical application and theory of colloidal suspension rheology, written by an international coalition of experts.