23 research outputs found
S-shaped flow curves of shear thickening suspensions: Direct observation of frictional rheology
We study the rheological behavior of concentrated granular suspensions of
simple spherical particles. Under controlled stress, the system exhibits an
S-shaped flow curve (stress vs. shear rate) with a negative slope in between
the low-viscosity Newtonian regime and the shear thickened regime. Under
controlled shear rate, a discontinuous transition between the two states is
observed. Stress visualization experiments with a novel fluorescent probe
suggest that friction is at the origin of shear thickening. Stress
visualization shows that the stress in the system remains homogeneous (no shear
banding) if a stress is imposed that is intermediate between the high and
low-stress branches. The S-shaped shear thickening is then due to the
discontinuous formation of a frictional force network between particles upon
increasing the stress.Comment: 5 pages + 6 figure
Normal stresses in semiflexible polymer hydrogels
Biopolymer gels such as fibrin and collagen networks are known to develop
tensile axial stress when subject to torsion. This negative normal stress is
opposite to the classical Poynting effect observed for most elastic solids
including synthetic polymer gels, where torsion provokes a positive normal
stress. As recently shown, this anomalous behavior in fibrin gels depends on
the open, porous network structure of biopolymer gels, which facilitates
interstitial fluid flow during shear and can be described by a phenomenological
two-fluid model with viscous coupling between network and solvent. Here we
extend this model and develop a microscopic model for the individual diagonal
components of the stress tensor that determine the axial response of
semi-flexible polymer hydrogels. This microscopic model predicts that the
magnitude of these stress components depends inversely on the characteristic
strain for the onset of nonlinear shear stress, which we confirm experimentally
by shear rheometry on fibrin gels. Moreover, our model predicts a transient
behavior of the normal stress, which is in excellent agreement with the full
time-dependent normal stress we measure.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Porosity governs normal stresses in polymer gels
When sheared, most elastic solids such as metals, rubbers and polymer hydrogels dilate in the direction perpendicular to the shear plane. This well-known behaviour known as the Poynting effect is characterized by a positive normal stress [1]. Surprisingly, biopolymer gels made of fibrous proteins such as fibrin and collagen and many tissues exhibit the opposite effect, contracting under shear and displaying a negative normal stress [2, 3]. Here we show that this anomalous behaviour originates from the open network structure of biopolymer gels, which facilitates interstitial fluid flow during shear. Using fibrin networks with a controllable pore size as a model system, we show that the normal stress response to an applied shear is positive at short times, but decreases to negative values with a characteristic time scale set by pore size. Using a two-fluid model, we develop a quantitative theory that unifies the opposite behaviours encountered in synthetic and biopolymer gels. Synthetic polymer gels are impermeable to solvent flow and thus effectively incompressible at typical experimental time scales, whereas biopolymer gels are effectively compressible. Our findings suggest a new route to tailor elastic instabilities such as the die swell effect that often hamper processing of polymer materials and furthermore show that poroelastic effects play a much more important role in the mechanical properties of cells and tissues than previously anticipated
Erratum to: 36th International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1186/s13054-016-1208-6.]
The yield normal stress
Normal stresses in complex fluids lead to new flow phenomena because they can be comparable to, or even larger than, the shear stress. In addition, they are of paramount importance for formulating and testing constitutive equations for predicting nonviscometric flow behavior. Very little attention has thus far been paid to the normal stresses of yield stress fluids, which are difficult to measure. We report the first systematic study of the first and second normal stress differences in both continuous and slow oscillatory shear of three model nonthixotropic yield stress fluids, with N1 > 0 and N2 < 0. We show that both normal stress differences are quadratic functions of the shear stress both above and below the shear yield stress, leading to the existence of a yield normal stress. However, the contribution of the normal stresses to the von Mises yield criterion for these materials is small
Water migration through fat-based semi solid heterogeneous materials
Water migration through heterogeneous soft materials is central to many applications including oil recovery and consumer product stability of foods and cosmetics. This slow water transport affects all material properties such as mechanical, optical and electrical, but its understanding and modelling remains challenging due to complex wetting and diffusion processes across the heterogeneous material. Here, we study experimentally the penetration of water through a soft composite with hydrophobic (fat) and hydrophilic (salt) components. Conductivity measurements indicate the emergence of a percolating water network above critical water and salt volume fractions. This is corroborated by mechanical measurements revealing a concomitant stiffening of the material due to proliferating water bridges. Simulations of water absorption at spherical inclusions confirm this scenario and show the underlying cluster growth and percolation process