The electrorheology of suspensions consisting of Na-Fluorohectorite synthetic clay particles in silicon oil
Y. M\'eheust, K. P. S. Parmar, B. Schjelderupsen, J. O. Fossum

TL;DR
This study investigates how Na-fluorohectorite clay particles in silicon oil respond to electric fields, revealing a transition to shear-thinning behavior with electric field-dependent yield stresses and structural changes.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the electrorheological behavior of Na-fluorohectorite suspensions, including scaling laws for yield stresses and rheological bifurcations under electric fields.
Findings
Suspensions form chain-like structures above a threshold electric field.
Yield stresses scale with electric field as a power law with exponents ~1.93 and ~1.58.
Static yield stress scales with particle volume fraction as rac{}.
Abstract
Under application of an electric field greater than a triggering electric field kV/mm, suspensions obtained by dispersing particles of the synthetic clay fluoro-hectorite in a silicon oil, aggregate into chain- and/or column-like structures parallel to the applied electric field. This micro-structuring results in a transition in the suspensions' rheological behavior, from a Newtonian-like behavior to a shear-thinning rheology with a significant yield stress. This behavior is studied as a function of particle volume fraction and strength of the applied electric field, . The steady shear flow curves are observed to scale onto a master curve with respect to , in a manner similar to what was recently found for suspensions of laponite clay [42]. In the case of Na-fluorohectorite, the corresponding dynamic yield stress is demonstrated to scale with respect to as a…
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