On the existence of a simple yield stress fluid behavior
Guillaume Ovarlez (NAVIER), Sylvie Cohen-Addad (INSP, LPMDI), Kapil, Krishan, Julie Goyon (NAVIER), Philippe Coussot (NAVIER)

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether certain yield stress fluids, like foams and gels, behave as simple fluids with a consistent local flow law, by reviewing literature and conducting MRI experiments under controlled conditions.
Contribution
It provides a systematic procedure to study steady-state bulk properties and demonstrates that some dense suspensions behave as simple yield stress fluids when properly measured.
Findings
Materials behave as simple yield stress fluids in wide gap geometries
No steady-state shear banding observed under proper conditions
Flow behavior can be modeled with a local monotonic constitutive law
Abstract
Materials such as foams, concentrated emulsions, dense suspensions or colloidal gels, are yield stress fluids. Their steady flow behavior, characterized by standard rheometric techniques, is usually modeled by a Herschel-Bulkley law. The emergence of techniques that allow the measurement of their local flow properties (velocity and volume fraction fields) has led to observe new complex behaviors. It was shown that many of these materials exhibit shear banding in a homogeneous shear stress field, which cannot be accounted for by the standard steady-state constitutive laws of simple yield stress fluids. In some cases, it was also observed that the velocity fields under various conditions cannot be modeled with a single constitutive law and that nonlocal models are needed to describe the flows. Doubt may then be cast on any macroscopic characterization of such systems, and one may wonder…
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