A constitutive model for viscosity of dense fiber suspension
Monsurul Khan, Rishabh V. More, Arezoo M. Ardekani

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new constitutive model for predicting the shear thinning viscosity of dense fiber suspensions, calibrated with simulations and validated against experimental data, accounting for fiber aspect ratio and volume fraction effects.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel constitutive model that links shear stress, normal load, and fiber interactions to predict suspension viscosity, extending understanding of fiber suspension rheology.
Findings
Model accurately predicts shear thinning behavior.
Effective friction decreases with shear stress.
Predicts viscosity variations with fiber properties.
Abstract
We propose a constitutive model to predict the viscosity of fiber suspensions, which undergoes shear thinning, at various volume fractions, aspect ratios, and shear stresses/rates. We calibrate the model using the data from direct numerical simulation and prove the accuracy by predicting experimental measurements from the literature. We use a friction coefficient decreasing with the normal load between the fibers to quantitatively reproduce the experimentally observed shear thinning in fiber suspensions. In this model, the effective normal contact force, which is directly proportional to the bulk shear stress, determines the effective friction coefficient. A rise in the shear stress reduces the effective friction coefficient in the suspension. As a result, the jamming volume fraction increases with the shear stress, resulting in a shear thinning in the suspension viscosity. Moreover, we…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComposite Material Mechanics · Music Technology and Sound Studies · Textile materials and evaluations
