8 research outputs found

    Extensional viscosity of copper nanowire suspensions in an aqueous polymer solution

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    Suspensions of copper nanowires are emerging as new electronic inks for next-generation flexible electronics. Using a novel surface acoustic wave driven extensional flow technique we are able to perform currently lacking analysis of these suspensions and their complex buffer. We observe extensional viscosities from 3 mPa⋅\cdots (1 mPa⋅\cdots shear viscosity) to 37.2 Pa⋅\cdots via changes in the suspension concentration, thus capturing low viscosities that have been historically very challenging to measure. These changes equate to an increase in the relative extensional viscosity of nearly 12,200 times at a volume fraction of just 0.027. We also find that interactions between the wires and the necessary polymer additive affect the rheology strongly. Polymer-induced elasticity shows a reduction as the buffer relaxation time falls from 819 to 59 μ\mus above a critical particle concentration. The results and technique presented here should aid in the future formulation of these promising nanowire suspensions and their efficient application as inks and coatings.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, under review for Soft Matter RS

    Motility induced changes in viscosity of suspensions of swimming microbes in extensional flows

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    Suspensions of motile cells are model systems for understanding the unique mechanical properties of living materials which often consist of ensembles of self-propelled particles. We present here a quantitative comparison of theory against experiment for the rheology of such suspensions. The influence of motility on viscosities of cell suspensions is studied using a novel acoustically-driven microfluidic capillary-breakup extensional rheometer. Motility increases the extensional viscosity of suspensions of algal pullers, but decreases it in the case of bacterial or sperm pushers. A recent model [Saintillan, Phys. Rev. E, 2010, 81:56307] for dilute active suspensions is extended to obtain predictions for higher concentrations, after independently obtaining parameters such as swimming speeds and diffusivities. We show that details of body and flagellar shape can significantly determine macroscale rheological behaviour.Comment: 12 pages, 1 appendix, 7 figures, submitted to Soft Matter - under revie

    Pulmonary Deposition of Radionucleotide-Labeled Palivizumab: Proof-of-Concept Study

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    Objective: Current prevention and/or treatment options for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infections are limited as no vaccine is available. Prophylaxis with palivizumab is very expensive and requires multiple intramuscular injections over the RSV season. Here we present proof-of-concept data using nebulized palivizumab delivery as a promising new approach for the prevention or treatment of severe RSV infections, documenting both aerosol characteristics and pulmonary deposition patterns in the lungs of lambs. Design: Prospective animal study. Setting: Biosecurity Control Level 2-designated large animal research facility at the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, Melbourne, Australia. Subjects: Four weaned Border-Leicester/Suffolk lambs at 5 months of age. Interventions: Four lambs were administered aerosolized palivizumab conjugated to Tc-99m, under gaseous anesthesia, using either the commercially available AeroNeb Go® or the investigational HYDRA device, placed in-line with the inspiratory limb of a breathing circuit. Lambs were scanned in a single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT/CT) scanner in the supine position during the administration procedure. Measurements and Main Results: Both the HYDRA and AeroNeb Go® produced palivizumab aerosols in the 1–5 µm range with similar median (geometric standard deviation and range) aerosol droplet diameters for the HYDRA device (1.84 ± 1.40 μm, range = 0.54–5.41μm) and the AeroNeb Go® (3.07 ± 1.56 μm, range = 0.86–10 μm). Aerosolized palivizumab was delivered to the lungs at 88.79–94.13% of the total aerosolized amount for all lambs, with a small proportion localized to either the trachea or stomach. No difference between devices were found. Pulmonary deposition ranged from 6.57 to 9.25% of the total dose of palivizumab loaded in the devices, mostly in the central right lung. Conclusions: Aerosolized palivizumab deposition patterns were similar in all lambs, suggesting a promising approach in the control of severe RSV lung infections

    The acoustically-driven microfluidic extensional rheometer: development, validation, and application to complex low-viscosity fluids

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    The emergence of rheometric techniques for extensional flows is relatively recent (Bazilevsky, 1990; McKinley, 2002) when compared to methods for shear flows (Dontula, 2005). Two prominent extensional rheometry techniques involve creating liquid filaments that thin under the action of surface tension. Stress balances (Tirtaatmadja, 1993; Szabo, 1997; McKinley, 2002; McKinley, 2000) are used to determine the extensional viscosity from measurements made on such filaments. In the filament stretching extensional rheometer (FiSER – Tirtaatmadja 1993) a fluid sample is placed between two end-plates that are mechanically drawn apart at a controlled exponential rate. Another prominent technique, capillary break-up extensional rheometry (CaBER – McKinley, 2000; Rodd, 2004), also employs mechanical end-plates which are rapidly moved to a fixed separation to study the dynamics of liquid bridges. These two techniques have been successful in assessing the extensional properties of a wide variety of complex fluids from polymer solutions to suspensions (Tirtaatmadja, 1993; McKinley, 2002; Ooi, 2004). Although these two uni-axial extensional flow techniques have gained acceptance they are limited in their utility when analysing low-viscosity fluids. The stresses that occur in these flows can be non-dimensionalised so that the importance of different effects can be established (Rodd 2004). These experiments tend to use larger sample sizes, which can lead to an adverse asymmetry in the filament in which gravity causes the filament to sag. The mechanical operation of these devices can induce vibrations that propagate throughout the filament, which are not accounted for by stress balance analysis, and are not damped sufficiently in low-viscosity fluids. Such inertial effects are exacerbated by the large samples sizes. These issues make repeatable readings impractical in low-viscosity fluids (Rodd, 2004). Recent modifications of the CaBER concept permit improved access to low-viscosity fluids (Vadillo, 2010; Vadillo, 2012; Campo, 2010; Nelson, 2011; Keshavarz, 2015; Arratia, 2008). Nevertheless, it is still a challenge to obtain viscosities of complex aqueous fluids of viscosities of the order of 1 mPa.s. This thesis proposes and demonstrates a new microfluidic technique for extensional rheometry that harnesses the unique capabilities afforded by surface acoustic waves (SAW) to generate liquid filaments that thin under surface tension effects. This approach has three key attributes that are advantageous for the analysis of thin and complex fluids in extensional flow: - SAWs are able to generate stable fluid filaments from low-viscosity fluids. - Small sample volume sizes mean that effects due to gravity and inertia scale down favourably. Critically, this also permits the analysis of materials that are difficult to obtain in large volumes. - SAWs have the ability to manipulate fluids whilst not damaging delicate fluid constituents. This technique is used to analyse many novel fluids for a variety of purposes: validating theoretical predictions, optimising promising industrial fluids, and providing insights into unusual phenomena. These studies serve to validate the acoustically-driven capillary break-up approach as a valuable rheometric technique. The thesis is presented in the "thesis including published works" format wherein publications are combined with explanatory notes and additional unpublished material The dissertation begins by providing a background on rheology, and explains the need for extensional experiments to extract the extensional properties of fluids. It also reviews the limitations of the aforementioned conventional extensional techniques, specifically the problems they encounter when analysing low-viscosity fluids. Additionally, it defines the two fundamental challenges to be overcome in a filament-based extensional rheometer: the creation of a filament to reliably measure the neck radius as a function of time, and converting this data into a measurement of rheological properties. The novel ways in which SAWs manipulate fluids is then discussed, and their ability to generate fluid filaments is proposed as a means for extensional rheometry of low-viscosity fluids. The next chapter discusses the experimental approach that addresses the first of the fundamental challenges mentioned in the chapter above. It examines the obstacles and solutions involved with the development of the acoustically-driven capillary break-up device and those pertaining to the analysis of the low-viscosity fluid filament break-up data that it produces. Experimental challenges include the fabrication, operation, and testing of both the SAW device and the experimental rig which harnesses the device. Other challenges are the high spatial and temporal data resolution needed to distinguish differences between microfluidic break-up events of different but similar thin fluids. Despite these difficulties in development, the experimental system is shown to be suitable for rheological analysis and possesses considerable advantages, including the use of small test volumes, the stabilisation of thin filaments by SAWs, and the ability to harmlessly manipulate delicate particle suspensions and macromolecular solutions. The following chapter is in the form of a publication (Bhattacharjee, 2011) that demonstrates the validity of the acoustically-driven capillary break-up technique for rheological measurement. It also defines the conditions under which SAWs can be used to create liquid filaments, complementing the previous chapter. However, the main focus is the comparison of our experimental results with data from accepted rheological experiments, and the quantification of our data using standard rheological analysis. Good agreement is found from necking data of low-viscosity Newtonian and non-Newtonian fluids. Moreover, it is demonstrated that stress-balance analysis can be used here to convert the filament decay data from a viscoelastic strain-hardening fluid directly to stress and viscosity measurements. Finally, the technique is utilised in observing the effects of extensional flow on a small volume of low-viscosity solution containing a dissolved protein, for which measurements showed an interesting multi-stage filament break-up process. The subsequent chapter discusses the generic difficulties of extracting extensional viscosity using stress-balance analysis from the capillary break-up of low-viscosity fluids that do not exhibit strain-hardening; it then develops a new approach for such fluids. Analysis using a simple mid-filament stress balance, as seen in the previous chapter, is appropriate when thread-like filaments are formed; this occurs in the break-up of viscoelastic solutions, where long-lived filaments develop towards final break-up. However, many other fluids, particularly low-viscosity solutions, do not form near-cylindrical filaments. This leads to stress-balance analysis being complicated by the dynamic contributions of axial filament curvature, the difficulties of which are investigated here. Thus, extensive non-dimensionalised break-up data of Newtonian fluids is used to develop a calibration method that allows the extraction of extensional viscosity for unknown fluids without resorting to the prohibitively complicated approach of using full filament analysis to determine extensional viscosity. The next chapter is a publication (McDonnell, 2015) where the calibration method of extracting extensional viscosities is used with data from the acoustically-driven capillary break-up technique to pursue the validation of previously untested theoretical predictions of "active matter" bulk properties in extensional flow. Active matter theory (Hatwalne, 2004; Ramaswamy, 2010; Marchetti, 2013) describes suspensions composed of individual particles that are self-propelled, where their net average alignment contributes to the overall stresses and viscosity of the suspension. This theory represents active bodies as axisymmetric particles that exert a net thrust along their primary axis, producing hydrodynamic dipoles that drive the surrounding fluid along their lengths. Active particles can be placed into two groups: "pushers" drive a tensile flow along their principal axis (Drescher, 2011), while conversely "pullers" generate a contractile flow (Hatwalne, 2004); the positive hydrodynamic dipoles created by pusher particles are predicted to lower suspension viscosity below that of an equivalent passive particles suspension, while the negative hydrodynamic dipoles of pullers will increase viscosity. Predictions have been validated by experimental findings for pushers (Sokolov, 2009; Gachelin, 2013; Karmakar 2014) and pullers (Rafai, 2010) in shear flow, but not in extensional flow. Such systems are exemplified by living materials, like suspensions of motile microbes or the cytoskeletal polymers in ATP-powered white blood cells. However, such delicate biological suspensions are difficult to prepare in high volumes, and typically require aqueous media to suspend them and enable their motility, aspects that pose problems for alternative extensional techniques but are accommodated by the acoustically-driven capillary break-up technique. We measure the extensional viscosities of pushers using bacterial and mouse sperm suspensions, and pullers using algal suspensions. We extend a model previously proposed for dilute suspensions of active particles to obtain predictions at moderate and high concentrations. The experimental data is shown to be in good agreement with these predictions. The comparison identifies some key parameters that are geometry dependent that can strongly influence the extensional viscosity of these materials. (...

    Oscillation characteristics of low Weber number impinging micro-droplets

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    Oscillation characteristics of micro-droplets, when in partial contact with a dry and homogeneous substrate, are investigated using a volume of fluid (VOF) numerical method. Water is used as a fluid in both numerical and experimental studies. The velocity vectors are plotted along the phase boundary line, i.e. along the droplet interface, to show how the contact angle impacts the droplet shape during the entire oscillation process. It has been predicted that when the surface/liquid combination is of larger contact angle, the water droplet tends to spread partially as the contact velocity dynamics dominate over inertia, thereby restricting the change in shape, i.e. resulting in lesser mode of oscillations. However, all droplets that are considered here show a damped harmonic motion with the amplitude gradually decreasing to zero. Particularly, at a lower Weber number impact, it is predicted that both the height and spreading dynamics exhibit a unique decaying function for each droplet size considered
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