Theoretical model of viscous friction inside steadily sheared foams and concentrated emulsions
S. Tcholakova (1), N. D. Denkov (1), K. Golemanov (1), K. P., Ananthapadmanabhan (2), A. Lips (2) ((1) Laboratory of Chemical Physics &, Engineering, Faculty of Chemistry, Sofia University, Sofia, Bulgaria (2), Unilever Global Research Center, Trumbull, Connecticut, USA)

TL;DR
This paper develops a detailed theoretical model of viscous friction in sheared foams and emulsions, incorporating effects of curved menisci, surface forces, and surface viscosity, explaining diverse experimental behaviors.
Contribution
The paper extends previous models by including effects of meniscus curvature, surface forces, and surface viscosity, providing a comprehensive explanation of viscous stress behaviors.
Findings
Model predicts viscous stress proportional to Ca^1/2 with n=1/2.
Surface forces can alter the power-law index, explaining varied behaviors.
Good agreement between model predictions and experimental data.
Abstract
In a recent letter (Denkov et al., Phys. Rev. Lett., vol. 100 (2008) p. 138301) we calculated theoretically the macroscopic viscous stress of steadily sheared foam/emulsion from the energy dissipated inside the transient planar films, formed between neighboring bubbles/drops in the shear flow. The model predicts that the viscous stress in these systems should be a proportional to Ca^1/2, where Ca is the capillary number and n = 1/2 is the power-law index. In the current paper we explain in detail our model and develop it further in several aspects: First, we extend the model to account for the effects of viscous friction in the curved meniscus regions, surrounding the planar films, on the dynamics of film formation and on the total viscous stress. Second, we consider the effects of surface forces (electrostatic, van der Waals, etc.) acting between the surfaces of the neighboring…
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