Describing the Flow Curve of Shear-Banding Fluids Through a Structural Minimal Model
Daniel Quemada (MSC), Claudio Berli

TL;DR
This paper introduces a minimal structural model to describe the flow behavior of shear-banding fluids, capturing complex flow curves and phase coexistence, and successfully matching experimental data from wormlike micellar solutions.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel phenomenological model that predicts shear-banding and vorticity banding, including flow curve features like stress plateaus, with application to colloidal systems.
Findings
Model predicts non-monotonic shear stress vs. shear rate behavior.
Flow curve simulations match experimental data.
Inclusion of stress plateau as an adjustable parameter improves fit.
Abstract
Main characteristics of colloidal systems that develop fluid phases with different mechanical properties, namely shear-banding fluids, are briefly reviewed both from experimental and theoretical (modelling) point of view. A non-monotonic shear stress vs. shear rate constitutive relation is presented. This relation derives from a phenomenological model of a shear ratedependent viscosity describing structural changes and involves the possibility of multivalued shear rates under a given shear stress. In the case of a stress-dependent viscosity, the same model allows one to predict vorticity banding. Predictions of this model under controlled stress are discussed, namely occurrence of a kind of top- and bottom-jumping of the shear rate in response to stress increasing-decreasing. Applying this model to evaluation of the flow curve of such colloidal systems is performed. Particular emphasis…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSurfactants and Colloidal Systems · Material Dynamics and Properties · Pickering emulsions and particle stabilization
