Dilute dispersion of compound particles: deformation dynamics and rheology
Pavan Kumar Singeetham, Chaithanya K. V.S., Sumesh P. Thampi

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the deformation, stability, and rheology of compound particles in linear flows, providing analytical models up to second order in capillary number and exploring their viscoelastic behavior.
Contribution
It introduces analytical expressions for flow and deformation of compound particles up to O(Ca^2) and develops a constitutive equation for dilute dispersions, advancing understanding of their rheological properties.
Findings
Increased deformation due to hydrodynamic interactions
Enhanced effective viscosities and normal stress differences
Linear viscoelastic behavior characterized by complex modulus
Abstract
Compound particles are a class of composite systems in which solid particles encapsulated in a fluid droplet are suspended in another fluid. They are encountered in various natural and biological processes, for e.g., nucleated cells, hydrogels, microcapsules etc. In this work, we analyze the flow in and around a concentric compound particle and investigate the deformation and reorientation dynamics of the confining drop and its stability against breakup in imposed linear flows. We obtain analytical expressions for the flow fields upto O(Ca) (capillary number) and the deformed shape of the confining drop upto O(Ca^2) using a domain perturbation technique. Further, we develop an O(Ca) constitutive equation for the volume-averaged stress for a dilute dispersion of compound particles. Compared to linear theory, O(Ca^2) calculations are found to be important as they make qualitatively…
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