Chemically-adhesive particles form stronger and stiffer magnetorheological fluids
Abigail Rendos, Daryl W. Yee, Robert J. Macfarlane, Keith A. Brown

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that chemically-adhesive particles significantly enhance the strength and stiffness of magnetorheological fluids by introducing reversible chemical links, enabling dynamic tuning of their rheological properties.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel approach of functionalizing magnetic particles with chemical groups to improve MRF performance and explores dynamic control via chemical bonding.
Findings
Functionalized particles increase yield stress by up to 40%.
Stiffness doubles with chemical modifications.
Chemical links enable dynamic tuning of MRF properties.
Abstract
Magnetorheological fluids (MRF) are suspensions of magnetic particles that solidify in the presence of magnetic fields due to the particles forming chains along field lines. The magnetic forces between particles dominate the solidification process and determine the yield stress of the material. Here, we investigate how reversible chemical links between particles influence MRF yield stress and stiffness through rheological testing in flow and oscillation mode. First, we functionalize particles with phosphonate groups that are expected to link through hydrogen bonding and find that this MRF exhibits up to 40% higher yield stress and 100% higher stiffness than an MRF composed of unfunctionalized particles. To explain this, we model the chemical attraction as an adhesion that supplements dipole-dipole interactions between particles. Interestingly, we find that the increase in yield stress…
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