Aging, Rejuvenation and Thixotropy in Complex Fluids: Time-dependence of the Viscosity at Rest and under Constant Shear Rate or Shear Stress

Complex fluids exhibit time-dependent changes in viscosity that have been ascribed to both thixotropy and aging. However, there is no consensus for which phenomenon is the origin of which changes. A novel thixotropic model is defined that incorporates aging. Conditions under which viscosity changes...

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Main Author: Quemada Daniel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2008-10-01
Series:Applied Rheology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/arh-2008-0017
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spelling doaj-94d3522791a240a7964e3418e14b71d32021-09-06T19:40:02ZengDe GruyterApplied Rheology1617-81062008-10-0118553298-153298-1310.1515/arh-2008-0017Aging, Rejuvenation and Thixotropy in Complex Fluids: Time-dependence of the Viscosity at Rest and under Constant Shear Rate or Shear StressQuemada Daniel0Laboratoire Matière et Systèmes Complexes- UMR CNRS 7057, Université Paris Diderot-Paris 7, 75205Paris Cedex 13, FranceComplex fluids exhibit time-dependent changes in viscosity that have been ascribed to both thixotropy and aging. However, there is no consensus for which phenomenon is the origin of which changes. A novel thixotropic model is defined that incorporates aging. Conditions under which viscosity changes are due to thixotropy and aging are unambiguously defined. Viscosity changes in a complex fluid during a period of rest after destructuring exhibit a bifurcation at a critical volume fraction ϕc2. For volume fractions less than ϕc2 the viscosity remains finite in the limit t →∞. For volume fractions above critical the viscosity grows without limit, so aging occurs at rest. At constant shear rate there is no bifurcation, whereas under constant shear stress the model predicts a new bifurcation in the viscosity at a critical stress σB, identical to the yield stress σy observed under steady conditions. The divergence of the viscosity for σ≤σB is best defined as aging. However, for σ > σB, where the viscosity remains finite, it seems preferable to use the concepts of restructuring and destructuring, rather than aging and rejuvenation. Nevertheless, when a stress σA(≤σB) is applied during aging, slower aging is predicted and discussed as true rejuvenation. Plastic behaviour is predicted under steady conditions when σ > σB. The Herschel-Bulkley model fits the flow curve for stresses close to σB, whereas the Bingham model gives a better fit for σ >> σB. Finally, the model’s predictions are shown to be consistent with experimental data from the literature for the transient behaviour of laponite gels.https://doi.org/10.1515/arh-2008-0017magnetic drug targetingcancermagnetic nanoparticlemagnetostaticbiomagnetics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Quemada Daniel
spellingShingle Quemada Daniel
Aging, Rejuvenation and Thixotropy in Complex Fluids: Time-dependence of the Viscosity at Rest and under Constant Shear Rate or Shear Stress
Applied Rheology
magnetic drug targeting
cancer
magnetic nanoparticle
magnetostatic
biomagnetics
author_facet Quemada Daniel
author_sort Quemada Daniel
title Aging, Rejuvenation and Thixotropy in Complex Fluids: Time-dependence of the Viscosity at Rest and under Constant Shear Rate or Shear Stress
title_short Aging, Rejuvenation and Thixotropy in Complex Fluids: Time-dependence of the Viscosity at Rest and under Constant Shear Rate or Shear Stress
title_full Aging, Rejuvenation and Thixotropy in Complex Fluids: Time-dependence of the Viscosity at Rest and under Constant Shear Rate or Shear Stress
title_fullStr Aging, Rejuvenation and Thixotropy in Complex Fluids: Time-dependence of the Viscosity at Rest and under Constant Shear Rate or Shear Stress
title_full_unstemmed Aging, Rejuvenation and Thixotropy in Complex Fluids: Time-dependence of the Viscosity at Rest and under Constant Shear Rate or Shear Stress
title_sort aging, rejuvenation and thixotropy in complex fluids: time-dependence of the viscosity at rest and under constant shear rate or shear stress
publisher De Gruyter
series Applied Rheology
issn 1617-8106
publishDate 2008-10-01
description Complex fluids exhibit time-dependent changes in viscosity that have been ascribed to both thixotropy and aging. However, there is no consensus for which phenomenon is the origin of which changes. A novel thixotropic model is defined that incorporates aging. Conditions under which viscosity changes are due to thixotropy and aging are unambiguously defined. Viscosity changes in a complex fluid during a period of rest after destructuring exhibit a bifurcation at a critical volume fraction ϕc2. For volume fractions less than ϕc2 the viscosity remains finite in the limit t →∞. For volume fractions above critical the viscosity grows without limit, so aging occurs at rest. At constant shear rate there is no bifurcation, whereas under constant shear stress the model predicts a new bifurcation in the viscosity at a critical stress σB, identical to the yield stress σy observed under steady conditions. The divergence of the viscosity for σ≤σB is best defined as aging. However, for σ > σB, where the viscosity remains finite, it seems preferable to use the concepts of restructuring and destructuring, rather than aging and rejuvenation. Nevertheless, when a stress σA(≤σB) is applied during aging, slower aging is predicted and discussed as true rejuvenation. Plastic behaviour is predicted under steady conditions when σ > σB. The Herschel-Bulkley model fits the flow curve for stresses close to σB, whereas the Bingham model gives a better fit for σ >> σB. Finally, the model’s predictions are shown to be consistent with experimental data from the literature for the transient behaviour of laponite gels.
topic magnetic drug targeting
cancer
magnetic nanoparticle
magnetostatic
biomagnetics
url https://doi.org/10.1515/arh-2008-0017
work_keys_str_mv AT quemadadaniel agingrejuvenationandthixotropyincomplexfluidstimedependenceoftheviscosityatrestandunderconstantshearrateorshearstress
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