Giant deviation of a relaxation time from generalized Newtonian theory in Discontinuous Shear Thickening suspensions
Rijan Maharjan, Eric Brown

TL;DR
This study reveals that relaxation times in dense cornstarch suspensions near the shear thickening transition deviate significantly from generalized Newtonian predictions, highlighting complex dynamics not captured by traditional models.
Contribution
It demonstrates a large deviation from generalized Newtonian theory in the relaxation behavior of dense suspensions near the shear thickening transition.
Findings
Relaxation times scale with inverse critical shear rate near transition.
Discrepancy between measured and predicted relaxation times up to 10^4.
Relaxation times are on the order of 1 second, visible to the naked eye.
Abstract
We investigated the transient relaxation of a Discontinuous Shear Thickening suspension of cornstarch in water. We performed 2 types of relaxation experiments starting from a steady shear in a parallel plate rheometer, followed by either stopping the top plate rotation and measuring the transient torque relaxation, or removing the torque on the plate and measuring the transient tool rotation. We found that at low weight fraction , the suspensions exhibited a relaxation behavior consistent with a generalized Newtonian fluid. However, for larger weight fraction , near the liquid-solid transition , we found relaxation behaviors different from the generalized Newtonian model. The relaxation time in this range scales with the inverse of the critical shear rate at the onset of shear thickening. In this range the…
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