scholarly journals Characterization of velocity fluctuations and the transition from transient to steady state shear banding with and without pre-shear in a wormlike micelle solution under shear startup by Rheo-NMR

2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Rehab N. Al-kaby ◽  
Sarah L. Codd ◽  
Joseph D. Seymour ◽  
Jennifer R. Brown

AbstractRheo-NMR velocimetry was used to study shear banding of a 6 wt.% cetylpyridinium chloride (CPCl) worm-like micelle solution under shear startup conditions with and without pre-shear. 1D velocity profiles across the fluid gap of a concentric cylinder Couette shear cell were measured every 1 s following shear startup for four different applied shear rates within the stress plateau. Fitting of the velocity profiles allowed calculation of the shear banding characteristics (shear rates in the high and low shear band, the interface position and apparent slip at the inner rotating wall) as the flow transitioned from transient to steady state regimes. Characteristic timescales to reach steady state were obtained and found to be similar for all shear banding characteristics. Timescales decreased with increasing applied shear rate. Large temporal fluctuations with time were also observed and Fourier transform of the time and velocity autocorrelation functions quantified the fluctuation frequencies. Frequencies corresponded to the elastically driven hydrodynamic instabilities, i.e. vortices, that are known to occur in the unstable high shear band and were dependent upon both applied shear rate and the pre-shear protocol.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Stefan Kuczera

<p>A flow phenomena called ‘shear banding’ is often observed for a certain class of complex fluids, namely wormlike micellar solutions. Wormlike micelles are elongated flexible self-assembly structures formed by the aggregation of amphiphiles, which may entangle into a dynamic network above a certain concentration threshold. The entanglement results in the sample having both solid-like (elastic) and liquid-like (viscous) properties, an ambiguity commonly found in complex fluids. Under certain shear conditions, the flow couples with the structure of the micellar network, leading to the formation of (shear) bands with differing viscosity.  The principle goal of this work is to address open questions regarding the temporal and spatial stability of shear banded flow. Shear banding is often studied in cylindrical Couette cells, where the fluid is sheared in a gap between differentially rotating concentric cylinders. For the sake of an accurate description of the flow in such a shear cell, the methodology for a 2D Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) velocimetry technique (known as PGSE-RARE), which offers high temporal and spatial resolution, is improved and refined. Two main challenges are identified and overcome. The first concerns the fact that the velocity imaging process operates on a Cartesian grid, whereas the flow in the Couette cell is of cylindrical symmetry. Numerical calculations and NMR simulations based on the Bloch equations, as well as experimental evidence, give insight on the appropriate selection of the fluid volume over which velocity information is accumulated and the preferred scheme through which the NMR image is acquired in the so-called k-space. The small extent of the fluid gap for the cells in use is the second challenge. In this respect, a variant of the velocimetry technique is developed, which offers ultra high resolution in the gap direction, necessary for a detailed description of the flow profile in the banded state.  The refined methodology is applied in a thorough study of a certain wormlike micellar solution (‘10% CPCl’), which is known to exhibit spatiotemporal fluctuations and has been subject of numerous studies over the past 20 years. NMR results are supported by a recently developed 2D Rheo-USV (Ultrasonic Speckle Velocimetry) method, which offers an even higher temporal resolution. The two complementary methods show good agreement for averaged velocity profiles. In line with previous studies the fluid is found to follow a standard anomalous lever rule, which is characterized by a constant shear rate in the high viscosity band and a varying shear rate and proportion of the high shear rate band. In particular, the high resolution NMR variant allows a refined picture on the dynamics of the interface between the two bands. Furthermore, slip is observed for all investigated shear rates. The amount of slip, however, is found to strongly depend on the specifities of the Couette cells in use. Spatially and temporally resolved flow maps reveal various flow instabilities. Ultrasound measurements show vorticity structures in the order of the gap width. In the NMR case no such structures are observed due to the lower resolution in the axial direction. For higher shear rates the occurrence of turbulent bursts is detected for USV. No direct evidence of similar flow instabilities is found in the NMR case. Finally, broad distributions dominate the high shear rate band in temporally and spatially resolved velocity profiles, showing the fluctuative nature of the flow.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Stefan Kuczera

<p>A flow phenomena called ‘shear banding’ is often observed for a certain class of complex fluids, namely wormlike micellar solutions. Wormlike micelles are elongated flexible self-assembly structures formed by the aggregation of amphiphiles, which may entangle into a dynamic network above a certain concentration threshold. The entanglement results in the sample having both solid-like (elastic) and liquid-like (viscous) properties, an ambiguity commonly found in complex fluids. Under certain shear conditions, the flow couples with the structure of the micellar network, leading to the formation of (shear) bands with differing viscosity.  The principle goal of this work is to address open questions regarding the temporal and spatial stability of shear banded flow. Shear banding is often studied in cylindrical Couette cells, where the fluid is sheared in a gap between differentially rotating concentric cylinders. For the sake of an accurate description of the flow in such a shear cell, the methodology for a 2D Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) velocimetry technique (known as PGSE-RARE), which offers high temporal and spatial resolution, is improved and refined. Two main challenges are identified and overcome. The first concerns the fact that the velocity imaging process operates on a Cartesian grid, whereas the flow in the Couette cell is of cylindrical symmetry. Numerical calculations and NMR simulations based on the Bloch equations, as well as experimental evidence, give insight on the appropriate selection of the fluid volume over which velocity information is accumulated and the preferred scheme through which the NMR image is acquired in the so-called k-space. The small extent of the fluid gap for the cells in use is the second challenge. In this respect, a variant of the velocimetry technique is developed, which offers ultra high resolution in the gap direction, necessary for a detailed description of the flow profile in the banded state.  The refined methodology is applied in a thorough study of a certain wormlike micellar solution (‘10% CPCl’), which is known to exhibit spatiotemporal fluctuations and has been subject of numerous studies over the past 20 years. NMR results are supported by a recently developed 2D Rheo-USV (Ultrasonic Speckle Velocimetry) method, which offers an even higher temporal resolution. The two complementary methods show good agreement for averaged velocity profiles. In line with previous studies the fluid is found to follow a standard anomalous lever rule, which is characterized by a constant shear rate in the high viscosity band and a varying shear rate and proportion of the high shear rate band. In particular, the high resolution NMR variant allows a refined picture on the dynamics of the interface between the two bands. Furthermore, slip is observed for all investigated shear rates. The amount of slip, however, is found to strongly depend on the specifities of the Couette cells in use. Spatially and temporally resolved flow maps reveal various flow instabilities. Ultrasound measurements show vorticity structures in the order of the gap width. In the NMR case no such structures are observed due to the lower resolution in the axial direction. For higher shear rates the occurrence of turbulent bursts is detected for USV. No direct evidence of similar flow instabilities is found in the NMR case. Finally, broad distributions dominate the high shear rate band in temporally and spatially resolved velocity profiles, showing the fluctuative nature of the flow.</p>


Soft Matter ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (5) ◽  
pp. 826-836 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Tang ◽  
T. Kochetkova ◽  
H. Kriegs ◽  
J. K. G. Dhont ◽  
M. P. Lettinga

The smooth transition between gradient-banded velocity profiles with a sharp interface and curved velocity profiles in entangled xanthan suggests that stiffness and local interactions between the sliding polymer chains play essential roles in shear banding in entangled polyelectrolytes.


1988 ◽  
Vol 254 (6) ◽  
pp. H1059-H1064 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. J. Tangelder ◽  
D. W. Slaaf ◽  
T. Arts ◽  
R. S. Reneman

Velocity profiles, as determined in vivo in rabbit mesenteric arterioles with fluorescently labeled platelets as natural flow markers, were used to calculate least estimates of the actual wall shear rate in these microvessels (17–32 micron diam). The fit of the velocity data points described the profile as close to the wall as 0.5 micron. To satisfy the no-slip condition, a thin layer of fluid with a steep velocity gradient near the wall was assumed. Least estimates of wall shear rate, as calculated from the fitted platelet-velocity profiles and using the mean velocity gradient in this layer of fluid, ranged from 472 to 4,712 s-1 with a median value of 1,700 s-1. Red blood cell center-line velocities varied between 1.3 and 14.4 mm/s (median 3.4). The wall shear rates were at least 1.46–3.94 (median 2.12) times higher than expected on the basis of a parabolic velocity distribution but with the same volume flow in the vessel. Considerable spatial differences in wall shear rate might exist even within a short segment of a vessel.


2005 ◽  
Vol 128 (2) ◽  
pp. 163-168 ◽  
Author(s):  
Constantin Ciocanel ◽  
Kevin Molyet ◽  
Hideki Yamamoto ◽  
Sheila L. Vieira ◽  
Nagi G. Naganathan

This paper presents a new magnetorheological (MR) cell design along with a study of the magnetic field, shear rate, and time/shear strain influences on the properties and behavior of a MR fluid tested for long periods of time. The MR cell was designed to adapt a commercially available rheometer to measure the rheological properties of the fluid. Overall characteristics of the designed MR cell output capability are provided. Constant shear rate tests, two hours in duration, have been performed at shear rates between 0.1l∕s and 200l∕s under magnetic field intensities up to 0.4T. The rheological measurements indicated that over time the fluid’s shear stress magnitude decreases until it reaches a steady state. The time required to reach the steady state depends on both the magnetic field strength and the shear rate. The higher the field and the smaller the shear rate the shorter the time for the steady state to be reached.


2001 ◽  
Vol 15 (06n07) ◽  
pp. 1070-1077 ◽  
Author(s):  
RYUJI AIZAWA ◽  
SHEILA L. VIEIRA ◽  
MASAMI NAKANO ◽  
YOSHINOBU ASAKO

The ER fluids containing sulfonated polymer particles were continuously sheared at increasing and decreasing shear rates using a rotary concentric cylinder rheometer and the hysteresis in the up- and down-flow-curves were analyzed. The ER fluids show hysteresis of shear stress and current density. The up-curve (when shear rate increased) was located below the down-curve (when shear rate decreased). As the electric field increased, the area in the hysteresis curves increased. The hysteresis depended on the electric field strength, the time of the applied electric field, the volume fraction of particles and the water content of the particles. Hysteresis phenomenon was explained, based on the formation of agglomerations of dispersed particles in the ER fluid and on changes of the lamellar formations


1976 ◽  
Vol 98 (3) ◽  
pp. 488-493 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas H. Reif ◽  
Robert M. Nerem ◽  
Francis A. Kulacki

The effect of high wall shear rates on the uptake of 131I-albumin by the arterial wall has been studied in vitro using common carotid arteries excised from anesthetized dogs and perfused with a steady state flow of homologous serum. Wall uptake was found to depend nearly linearly upon wall shear rate. The overall transport of 131I-albumin from the perfusing fluid to the vessel wall appears to be rate controlled by a shear dependent fluid-wall interface process. This study was carried out at high shear rates for flows which were transitional and turbulent. Because of the complexity of such flows, direct measurements of pressure drop were used to determine the shear rate at the vessel wall. Simultaneous pressure drop and flow measurements allowed the determination of the friction factor as a function of Reynolds number; results obtained at the higher Reynolds numbers correspond to those for a rigid pipe with a relative roughness of 0.05.


1994 ◽  
Vol 344 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick T. Spicer ◽  
Sotiris E. Pratsinis

AbstractThe flocculation of polystyrene particles with aluminum sulfate or alum (Al2 (SO4)3) by turbulent shear was studied as a function of the applied shear rates (63–129 s−1) and flocculant concentrations (11 and 32 mg/L) in a stirred tank. Increasing the shear rate increased the floc growth rate but decreased the maximum attainable floc size. Increasing the concentration of alum increased the floc growth rate and the maximum floc size. A steady state between floc growth and breakage was attained after which the floc size distribution no longer changed. The normalized steady state size distributions allowed evaluation of the relative contributions of shear rate and flocculant concentration to the performance of the process.


1982 ◽  
Vol 55 (5) ◽  
pp. 1426-1436 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Nakajima ◽  
E. R. Harrell

Abstract It has been customary to assign certain time scales to given polymer processes. For example, the extrusion process is said to occur at a shear rate in the order of some hundred reciprocal seconds and injection molding at some thousand reciprocal seconds or higher. These statements are usually accompanied by instructions that the viscosity of a material is to be measured at the respective shear rate in order to characterize its processability. However, the above argument is only partially valid, and a single-point viscosity measurement is only a part of the processability evaluation. Inadequacy of the above rationale has been recognized by industry for a long time. With the rapid growth of plastics production in the 1960's, plastic processing went through a technological evolution. In the early stage of evolution of various fabrication techniques, development of suitable grades of material for the respective processes was the major effort of the plastic producers. Soon it became clear that resins which had the same viscosity at the so-called processing shear rate often behaved differently in the actual process. This led to the measurement of the steady-state flow properties at lower shear rates than the so-called processing shear rate, which was representative of the highest shear rate involved in the process. The significant observation was that the viscosity differences of resins often were magnified at the lower shear rate. Sometimes, a subtle difference in processability corresponded to a viscosity difference observable only at very low shear rates. Thus, acquisition of the steady-state flow curve from the low-shear-rate limit (i.e., the Newtonian viscosity) to the high shear rate limit (i.e., the limiting power-law region) became a subject of practical interest. The characterization of such flow curves and their relation to molecular weight distribution (MWD) became a subject of intense study for commercial plastics having a large variation in MWD.


Soft Matter ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (28) ◽  
pp. 6468-6483 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mahdi Boudaghi-Khajehnobar ◽  
Brian J. Edwards ◽  
Bamin Khomami

Transient and steady-state shear banding are demonstrated for polydisperse polymer melts as functions of applied shear rate.


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