Rheoscopic Fluids in a Post-Kalliroscope World
Daniel Borrero-Echeverry, Christopher J. Crowley, Tyler P. Riddick

TL;DR
This paper reviews alternative rheoscopic flow visualization methods and introduces a cost-effective fluid made from shaving cream crystals, offering comparable or better performance than traditional Kalliroscope.
Contribution
It presents a novel, inexpensive rheoscopic fluid derived from shaving cream crystals as a viable alternative to Kalliroscope for flow visualization.
Findings
Shaving cream crystals can be used as rheoscopic particles.
The new fluid performs similarly or better than Kalliroscope.
The method is inexpensive and easy to produce.
Abstract
In rheoscopic flow visualization, the working fluid is seeded with small reflective flakes that align preferentially in the flow due to their anisotropy. This leads to directed light scattering, which can be exploited to distinguish qualitatively different regions of the flow. For the past four decades, the gold standard in rheoscopic flow visualization has been Kalliroscope, a commercial product consisting of crystalline guanine particles. Recently, however, worldwide production of crystalline guanine has dropped precipitously, leading the Kalliroscope Corporation to halt production in 2014. Here, we present a short survey of alternative rheoscopic flow visualization techniques and introduce an inexpensive rheoscopic fluid based on stearic acid crystals extracted from shaving cream, which has a performance similar to, and in certain respects superior to, Kalliroscope.
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Taxonomy
TopicsRheology and Fluid Dynamics Studies
