scholarly journals Study rheological behavior of refined rapeseed oil

Author(s):  
Ioana Stanciu

Extracted from rapeseed oil was subjected to purification and refining process and then characterized in terms of rheological, ie dynamic viscosity dependence study in terms of speed shear constant temperature. The results show that at 400C, 600C, 800C and 900C dynamic viscosities of oil decreases with shear rate. At higher shear rates of 20s-1 shows lower viscosity oil fluctuations, became almost constant.  

2021 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 247-249
Author(s):  
Ioana Stanciu

This article presents the dependence of dynamic temperature viscosity and shear rate for rapeseed oils used as biodegradable lubricant and SAE 10W. The studied rheograms show the dependence of the dynamic shear rate viscosity as well as the dependence of the dynamic temperature viscosity. From the rheograms there is a decrease in the dynamic viscosity with temperature and shear rate for the two oils. The dynamic viscosity of rapeseed oil is most strongly influenced by the shear rate compared to the studied SAE 10W oil. The rheological behavior of rapeseed and mineral oil SAE 10W was studied with the Haake VT 550 viscometer at temperatures between 40 and 1000C.


2013 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 51-54
Author(s):  
Ioana Stanciu

AbstractThe refined rapeseed oil were carefully studied in recent years because they may constitute a raw material for biodegradable lubricants getting organic. These oils are an alternative to synthetic mineral oils. This article presents rheological behavior of refined rapeseed oil. The dynamic viscosity of refined rapeseed oil was determined at temperatures range between 313 - 363 K and shear rates range from 3.3 - 120 s-1. For temperature ranging between 313 - 363 K refined rapeseed oil has a Bingham fluid behavior.


Author(s):  
Eric Cayeux ◽  
Amare Leulseged

Abstract It is nowadays well accepted that the steady state rheological behavior of drilling fluids must be modelled by at least three parameters. One of the most often used models is the yield power law, also referred as the Herschel-Bulkley model. Other models have been proposed like the one from Robertson-Stiff, while other industries have used other three-parameter models such as the one from Heinz-Casson. Some studies have been made to compare the degree of agreement between different rheological models and rheometer measurements but in most cases, already published works have only used mechanical rheometers that have a limited number of speeds and precision. For this paper, we have taken measurements with a scientific rheometer in well-controlled conditions of temperature and evaporation, and for relevant shear rates that are representative to normally encountered drilling operation conditions. Care has been made to minimize the effect of thixotropy on measurements, as the shear stress response of drilling fluids depends on its shear history. Measurements have been made at different temperatures, for various drilling fluid systems (both water and oil-based), and with variable levels of solid contents. Also, the shear rate reported by the rheometer itself, is corrected to account for the fact that the rheometer estimates the wall shear rate on the assumption that the tested fluid is Newtonian. A measure of proximity between the measurements and a rheological model is defined, thereby allowing the ranking of different rheological behavior model candidates. Based on the 469 rheograms of various drilling fluids that have been analyzed, it appears that the Heinz-Casson model describes most accurately the rheological behavior of the fluid samples, followed by the model of Carreau, Herschel-Bulkley and Robertson-Stiff, in decreasing order of fidelity.


e-Polymers ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongqi Hu ◽  
Lin Li ◽  
Mingcai Chen

AbstractThe rheological properties of the aqueous solution of 1H,1H,11Hperfluoroundecyl acrylate -modified poly(acrylic acid) were studied. It was found that the solutions show different viscosity dependence on shear time at different pH and shear rates. At lower pH and moderate shear rates, the viscosity of the solutions shows a great increase with time. At pH 5.0 and above, it exhibits thixotropy at any shear rate, i.e., the viscosity decreases with time at constant shear rates. If the shearing stops, the viscosity of the solutions can be recovered to some extent. These phenomena are interpreted to be due to the intermolecular hydrophobic association: the construction of the association leads to an increase of the viscosity, the destroying of the association leads to a decrease of the viscosity. The pH-induced conformational change and the shearing-induced chain elongation jointly influence the intermolecular hydrophobic association.


1985 ◽  
Vol 60 ◽  
Author(s):  
John R Morris ◽  
W Roger Cannon

AbstractRheology and the component interactions which affect rheology were studied for a tape casting composition similar to commercial systems. Viscosity measurements at different shear rates were compared to measured tape properties to determine if high or low shear rate rheological behavior controls tape characteristics. Relative viscosity was measured to assess the contribution of each component to the stability of the dispersion.


2017 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Pasquale M. Falcone ◽  
Elisa Sabatinelli ◽  
Federico Lemmetti ◽  
Paolo Giudici

The molecular structure of Traditional Balsamic Vinegar (TBV) undergoes shear-induced and time-dependent jamming transitions due to the high solute concentration and self-assembling phenomena of high molecular size melanoidins with very-long relaxation times (12 years at least or more than 25). The purpose of this work was to perform a descriptive and quantitativeevaluation of relationships between rheological properties, vinegar composition, and perceptual assessment of sensory properties according to the official sensory procedure. With this aim, vinegars having quality traits matching legal requirements for the PDO designation were analyzed for their reducing sugars (glucose and fructose), volatile acidity, fixed acidity, pH, Brix degree, and density as well as for their flow behaviour and dynamic viscosity over a wide range of shear rates. Results showed that flow behaviour of TBV was affected by jamming properties over wide-scale ranges of shear rate producing flow instability below a shear rate of 60s-1. Homogeneous, continuous flow was found at medium-high shear rates with thickening and/or thinning traits. A common onset for the structure scaling was mathematically estimated to occur close to when the density was 1.32 gmL-1. Comparative analysis of rheological, compositional and sensory properties suggested that the colloidal jamming of the vinegar melanoidins dominated the total olfactive and gustative stimuli, and determined the classification of the vinegars that had a higher dynamic viscosity but more homogeneous flow as being of the highest commercial quality category. A robust statistical model was proposed encoding for the top-down decision-making process for quality assignment according to the official sensory procedure, using composition and flow properties as predictor variables. 


Entropy ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (8) ◽  
pp. 979
Author(s):  
Abderrahim Bakak ◽  
Mohamed Lotfi ◽  
Rodolphe Heyd ◽  
Amine Ammar ◽  
Abdelaziz Koumina

The dynamic viscosity and rheological properties of two different non-aqueous graphene nano-plates-based nanofluids are experimentally investigated in this paper, focusing on the effects of solid volume fraction and shear rate. For each nanofluid, four solid volume fractions have been considered ranging from 0.1% to 1%. The rheological characterization of the suspensions was performed at 20 ∘C, with shear rates ranging from 10−1s−1 to 103s−1, using a cone-plate rheometer. The Carreau–Yasuda model has been successfully applied to fit most of the rheological measurements. Although it is very common to observe an increase of the viscosity with the solid volume fraction, we still found here that the addition of nanoparticles produces lubrication effects in some cases. Such a result could be very helpful in the domain of heat extraction applications. The dependence of dynamic viscosity with graphene volume fraction was analyzed using the model of Vallejo et al.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 122-127
Author(s):  
Ioana Stanciu

This paper proposes new rheological models for olive oil. The purpose of this study was to find an exponential  dependence between temperature and dynamic viscosity of olive oil, using one equation. Equation constants lnη0, A1 and t1 were determined by fitting exponential. The olive oil have investigated using a Haake VT 550 Viscotester developing shear rates ranging between 3 and 120 s-1 and measuring viscosities from 104 to 106 mPa·s when the HV1 viscosity sensor is used. Olive oil dynamic viscosity decreases with increasing temperature at constant shear rate.  Plotting the ln dynamic viscosity depending on temperature shows an exponential decline.


2005 ◽  
Vol 78 (5) ◽  
pp. 806-826 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abhijit Bandyopadhyay ◽  
Mousumi De Sarkar ◽  
Anil K. Bhowmick

Abstract Melt rheological behavior of acrylic rubber (ACM)/ silica and epoxidized natural rubber (ENR)/ silica hybrid nanocomposites prepared by using sol-gel technique at room temperature was studied for the first time in a Monsanto Processability Tester (capillary rheometer) at nine different shear rates and three different temperatures (100 °C, 110 °C and 120 °C). Tetraethoxysilane (TEOS) was used as the precursor for silica, and water to TEOS mole ratio was maintained at 2:1 throughout the experiments. The loading of TEOS was 10, 30 and 50 wt% with respect to the rubber and the pH of the medium was maintained in the range of 1.0–2.0 by the addition of appropriate amount of concentrated HCl. The shear viscosity showed marginal increment even at higher nanosilica loading for the rubber/ silica nanocomposites. All the compositions displayed pseudoplastic behavior and obeyed Power Law model within the experimental conditions. The reinforcement factor (RF) calculated from the ratio of the viscosities of the filled and the unfilled systems was found to increase with nanosilica content at a particular shear rate. ENR/ silica nanocomposites displayed higher increment of RF compared to ACM/ silica system, which may be due to better polymer-filler interaction in the former. The RF remained almost constant for both the systems with the variation of temperature. The die swell of the nanocomposites was always lower than that of the gum rubber sample, though the nature of variation of die swell with shear rates was different for ACM and ENR nanocomposites. In both the cases, the die swell was found to decease with increase in temperature. The variation in activation energy with the experimental shear rates was also calculated, where the hybrids displayed a decreasing trend in activation energy with the increase in shear rate.


1994 ◽  
Vol 71 (01) ◽  
pp. 078-090 ◽  
Author(s):  
H L Goldsmith ◽  
M M Frojmovic ◽  
Susan Braovac ◽  
Fiona McIntosh ◽  
T Wong

SummaryThe effect of shear rate and fibrinogen concentration on adenosine diphosphate-induced aggregation of suspensions of washed human platelets in Poiseuille flow at 23°C was studied using a previously described double infusion technique and resistive particle counter size analysis (1). Using suspensions of multiple-centrifuged and -washed cells in Tyrodes-albumin [3 × 105 μl−1; (17)] with [fibrinogen] from 0 to 1.2μM, the, rate and extent of aggregation with 0.7 μM ADP in Tyrodes-albumin were measured over a range of mean transit times from 0.2 to 43 s, and at mean tube shear rates, Ḡ, = 41.9, 335 and 1,335 s−1. As measured by the decrease in singlet concentration, aggregation at 1.2 μM fibrinogen increased with increasing Ḡ up to 1,335 s1, in contrast to that previously reported in citratcd plasma, in which aggregation reached a maximum at Ḡ = 335 s−1. Without added fibrinogen, there was no aggregation at Ḡ = 41.9 s1; at Ḡ = 335 s1, there was significant aggregation but with an initial lag time, aggregation increasing further at Ḡ = 1,335 s−1. Without added fibrinogen, aggregation was abolished at all Ḡ upon incubation with the hexapeptide GRGDSP, but was almost unaffected by addition of an F(ab’)2 fragment of an antibody to human fibrinogen. Aggregation in the absence of added fibrinogen was also observed at 37°C. The activation of the multiple-washed platelets was tested using flow cytometry with the fluorescently labelled monoclonal antibodies FITC-PAC1 and FITC-9F9. It was shown that 57% of single cells in unactivated PRT expressed maximal GPIIb-IIIa fibrinogen receptors (MoAb PAC1) and 54% expressed pre-bound fibrinogen (MoAb 9F9), with further increases on ADP activation. However, incubation with GRGDSP and the F(ab’)2 fragment did not inhibit the prebound fibrinogen. Moreover, relatively unactivated cells (8% expressing receptor, 14% prebound fibrinogen), prepared from acidified cPRP by single centrifugation with 50 nM of the stable prostacyclin derivative, ZK 36 374, and resuspension in Tyrodes-albumin at 5 × 104 μl−1, aggregated with 2 and 5 μM ADP at Ḡ = 335 and 1,335 s−1 in the absence of added fibrinogen. We therefore postulate that a protein such as von Willebrand factor, secreted during platelet isolation or in flow at sufficiently high shear rates, may yield the observed shear-rate dependent aggregation without fibrinogen.


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