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1.
For many solid materials the stress relaxation process obeys the universal relationF = – (d/d lnt)max = (0.1 ± 0.01) ( 0 i ), regardless of the structure of the material. Here denotes the stress,t the time, 0 the initial stress of the experiment and i the internal stress. A cooperative model accounting for the similarity in relaxation behaviour between different materials was developed earlier. Since this model has a spectral character, the concepts of linear viscoelasticity are used here to evaluate the corresponding prediction of the dynamic mechanical properties, i.e. the frequency dependence of the storageE () and lossE () moduli. Useful numerical approximations ofE () andE () are also evaluated. It is noted that the universal relation in stress relaxation had a counterpart in the frequency dependence ofE (). The theoretical prediction of the loss factor for high-density polyethylene is compared with experimental results. The agreement is good.  相似文献   

2.
A. Papo 《Rheologica Acta》1988,27(3):320-325
Shear stress and shear rate data obtained for gypsum plaster pastes were correlated by means of different rheological models. The pastes were prepared from a commercial calcium sulfate hemihydrate at various water/plaster ratios ranging from 100/150 to 100/190. The tests were performed at 25°C using a rotating coaxial cylinder viscosimeter. The measurements were accomplished by applying a step-wise decreasing shear rate sequence. Discrimination among the models was made: (1) on the basis of the fitting goodness; (2) by checking the physical meaning of the calculated parameters; (3) on the basis of the stability of the parameters and of their prediction capacity beyond the limits of the experimental data. In the light of above, the Casson model seemed to be most effective for application to gypsum plaster pastes. K Consistency - n Power-law index - N Number of experimental data - P Number of parameters - Shear rate (s–1) - 0 Viscosity (Pa · s) - d Dispersing medium viscosity (Pa · s) - p Plastic viscosity (Pa · s) - Viscosity at zero shear rate (Pa · s) - Viscosity at infinite shear rate (Pa · s) - [] Intrinsic viscosity - 2 Variance - Shear stress (Pa) - 0 Yield stress (Pa) - Solid volume fraction - m Maximum solid volume fraction  相似文献   

3.
A mathematical model was developed to describe the behavior of Herschel-Bulkley fluids in a back extrusion (annular pumping) device. A technique was also developed to determine the rheological properties (yield stress, flow behavior index, and consistency coefficient) of these fluids. Mathematical terms were expressed in four dimensionless terms, and graphical aids and tables were prepared to facilitate the handling of the expressions.Nomenclature a radius of the plunger, m - dv/dr shear rate, s–1 - F force applied to the plunger, N - F b buoyancy force, N - F cb force corrected for buoyancy, N - F T recorded force just before the plunger is stopped, N - F Te recorded force after the plunger is stopped, N - g acceleration due to gravity, m/s2 - H(t) momentary height between plunger and container bottom, m - K a/R, dimensionless - L length of annular region, m - L(t) depth of plunger penetration, m - n flow behavior index, dimensionless - p static pressure, Pa - P L pressure in excess of hydrostatic pressure at the plunger base, Pa - p 0 pressure at entrance to annulus, Pa - P pressure drop per unit of length, Pa/m - Q total volumetric flow rate through the annulus, m3/s - r radial coordinate, measured from common axis of cylinder forming annulus, m - R radius of outer cylinder of annulus, m - s reciprocal of n, dimensionless - t time, s - T dimensionless shear stress, defined in Eq. (3) - T 0 dimensionless yield stress, defined in Eq. (4) - T w dimensionless shear stress at the plunger wall - p velocity of plunger, m/s - velocity, m/s - mass density of fluid, kg/m3 - Newtonian viscosity, Pa s - P p 0 p L , Pa - consistency coefficient, Pa sn - value of where shear stress is zero - , + limits of the plug flow region (Fig. 1) - r/R - shear stress, Pa - y yield stress, Pa - w shear stress at the plunger wall, Pa - dimensionless flow rate defined in Eq. (24) - dimensionless velocity defined by Eq. (5) - , + dimensionless velocity outside the plug flow region - max dimensionless maximum velocity in the plug flow region - p dimensionless velocity at the plunger wall  相似文献   

4.
An experimental investigation was undertaken to study the apparent thickening behavior of dilute polystyrene solutions in extensional flow. Among the parameters investigated were molecular weight, molecular weight distribution, concentration, thermodynamic solvent quality, and solvent viscosity. Apparent relative viscosity was measured as a function of wall shear rate for solutions flowing from a reservoir through a 0.1 mm I.D. tube. As increased, slight shear thinning behavior was observed up until a critical wall shear rate was exceeded, whereupon either a large increase in or small-scale thickening was observed depending on the particular solution under study. As molecular weight or concentration increased, decreased and, the jump in above , increased. increased as thermodynamic solvent quality improved. These results have been interpreted in terms of the polymer chains undergoing a coil-stretch transition at . The observation of a drop-off in at high (above ) was shown to be associated with inertial effects and not with chain fracture due to high extensional rates.  相似文献   

5.
An analytical study was made to examine the effect of vascular deformability on the pulsatile blood flow in arterioles through the use of a suitable mathematical model. The blood in arterioles is assumed to consist of two layers — both Newtonian but with differing coefficients of viscosity. The flow characteristics of blood as well as the resistance to flow have been determined using the numerical computations of the resulting expressions. The applicability of the model is illustrated using numerical results based on the existing experimental data. r, z coordinate system - u, axial/longitudinal velocity component of blood - p pressure exerted by blood - b density of blood - µ viscosity of blood - t time - , displacement components of the vessel wall - T t0,T 0 known initial stresses - density of the wall material - h thickness of the vessel wall - T t,T stress components of the vessel - K l,K r components of the spring coefficient - C l,C r components of the friction coefficient - M a additional mass of the mechanical model - r 1 outer radius of the vessel - thickness of the plasma layer - r 1 inner radius of the vessel - circular frequency of the forced oscillation - k wave number - E 0,E t, , t material parameters for the arterial segment - µ p viscosity of the plasma layer - Q total flux - Q p flux across the plasma zone - Q h flux across the core region - Q mean flow rate - resistance to flow - P pressure difference - l length of the segment of the vessel  相似文献   

6.
The peristaltic motion of a non-Newtonian fluid represented by the constitutive equation for a second-order fluid was studied for the case of a planar channel with harmonically undulating extensible walls. A perturbation series for the parameter ( half-width of channel/wave length) obtained explicit terms of 0(2), 0(2Re2) and 0(1Re2) respectively representing curvature, inertia and the non-Newtonian character of the fluid. Numerical computations were performed and compared to the perturbation analysis in order to determine the range of validity of the terms.Presented at the second conference Recent Developments in Structured Continua, May 23–25, 1990, in Sherbrooke, Québec, Canada  相似文献   

7.
H. Potente 《Rheologica Acta》1988,27(4):410-417
Zusammenfassung Das Mischen von Stoffen mit unterschiedlichen rheologischen Eigenschaften in Schneckenmaschinen ist in der Kunststoffauf- und -verarbeitung eine Standardaufgabe. Trotzdem gibt es hierfür kein zufriedenstellendes mathematisch-physikalisches Modell. Daher werden zunächst einfache Mischmodelle diskutiert. Auf der Basis dieser Modelle wird dann unter Berücksichtigung der Besonderheiten des Plastifizierextruderprozesses eine Mischgütebeziehung mathematisch formuliert. Die experimentelle Überprüfung erfolgt mit Hilfe der Grauwertanalyse extrudierter Zweistoffsysteme, bei denen ein Stoff mit Ruß eingefärbt war. Da der Mischprozeß hochgradig stochastisch ist, streuen die Meßergebnisse. Unter Berücksichtigung dieses Tatbestandes ist der theoretische Ansatz zufriedenstellend.
Mixing of polymer resins with different rheological properties is a usual demand in plastics processing using screw extruders. A mathematical model describing this processing problem sufficiently is not known, however. Therefore, simple mixing models will be discussed. Based on these, a concept for the calculation of mixing homogeneity will be presented, including the particular requirement of the plasticating screw process. An experimental investigation utilizes the grey-value analysis of extruded two-component materials, which in one phase is carbon-black filled. Considering the fact that the mixing process is highly random, the theoretical model leads to a good level of aggreement with the scattering measurement data.

b Schneckenkanalbreite - B Bandbreite der Grauwerte - c Konstante - mittlere Konzentration, bezogen auf die Grauwertbandbreite - h Höhe, Gangtiefe, Schneckenkanalhöhe - h 0 Gangtiefe der Einzugszone - h 1 Gangtiefe der Ausstoßzone - L Länge - gemittelte Schmelzebettlänge - n Exponent des Potenzfließgesetzes - s Standardabweichung der Grauwerte bezogen auf die Grauwertbandbreite - S Standardabweichung der Grauwerte - t Verweilzeit - t 1 kürzeste Verweilzeit - mittlere Verweilzeit - 0 Umfangsgeschwindigkeit - mittlere Geschwindigkeit - V Volumenstrom - w Dicke eines Kontrollelements - w Ausstreichdicke eines Kontrollelements - x Koordinate - Mittelwert der Grauwerte - y Koordinate - Scherdeformationswinkel - Scherdeformation - mittlere Scherdeformation - Schergeschwindigkeit - Viskosität - 1 dimensionslose kürzeste Verweilzeit - dimensionsloser Volumenstrom - LSM laminarer Schermischgrad - LSM, the theoretischer laminarer Schermischgrad - LSM, exp experimenteller laminarer Schermischgrad - 2 Varianz der Verweilzeit im Schmelzebett - Schubspannung - Gangsteigungswinkel der Schnecke - ø Volumenanteil - dimensionslose Kennzahl  相似文献   

8.
Behavior of polymer melts in biaxial as well as uniaxial elongational flow is studied based on the predictions of three constitutive models (Leonov, Giesekus, and Larson) with single relaxation mode. Transient elongational viscosities in both flows are calculated for three constitutive models, and steady-state elongational viscosities are obtained as functions of strain rates for the Giesekus and the Larson models.Change of elongational flow behavior with adjustable parameter is investigated in each model. Steady-state viscosities E and B are obtained for the Leonov model only when the strain-hardening parameter is smaller than the critical value cr determined in each flow. In this model, uniaxial elongational viscosity E increases with increasing strain rate , while biaxial elongational viscosity B decreases with increasing biaxial strain rate B . The Giesekus model predictions depend on the anisotropy parameter . E and B increase with strain rates for small B while they decrease for large . When is 0.5, E in increasing, but B is decreasing. The Larson model predicts strain-softening behavior for both flows when the chain-contraction parameter > 0.5. On the other hand, when is small, the steady-state viscosities of this model show distinct maximum around = B = 1.0 with relaxation time . The maximum is more prominent in E than in B .  相似文献   

9.
The flow of a viscoelastic liquid driven by the steadily rotating bottom cover of a cylindrical cup is investigated. The flow field and the shape of the free surface are determined at the lowest significant orders of the regular domain perturbation in terms of the angular velocity of the bottom cap. The meridional field superposed on a primary azimuthal field shows a structure of multiple cells. The velocity field and the shape of the free surface are strongly effected by the cylinder aspect ratio and the elasticity of the liquid. The use of this flow configuration as a free surface rheometer to determine the first two Rivlin-Ericksen constants is shown to be promising.Nomenclature R, ,Z Coordinates in the physical domain D - , , Coordinates in the rest stateD 0 - r, ,z Dimensionless coordinates in the rest stateD 0 - Angular velocity - Zero shear viscosity - Surface tension coefficient - Density - Dimensionless surface tension parameter - 1, 2 The first two Rivlin-Ericksen constants - Stream function - Dimensionless second order meridional stream function - * Dimensionless second normal stress function - 2 Dimensionless sum of the first and second normal stress functions - N 1,N 2 The first and second normal stress functions - n Unit normal vector - D Stretching tensor - A n nth order Rivlin-Ericksen tensor - S Extra-stress - u Velocity field - U Dimensionless second order meridional velocity field - V Dimensionless first order azimuthal velocity field - p Pressure - Modified pressure field - P Dimensionless second order pressure field - J Mean curvature - a Cylinder radius - d Liquid depth at rest - D Dimensionless liquid depth at rest - h Free surface height - H Dimensionless free surface height at the second order  相似文献   

10.
In the thermally developing region, d yy /dx| y=h varies along the flow direction x, where yy denotes the component of stress normal to the y-plane; y = ±h at the die walls. A finite element method for two-dimensional Newtonian flow in a parallel slit was used to obtain an equation relating d yy /dx/ y=h and the wall shear stress 0 at the inlet; isothermal slit walls were used for the calculation and the inlet liquid temperature T0 was assumed to be equal to the wall temperature. For a temperature-viscosity relation /0 = [1+(T–T0]–1, a simple expression [(hd yy /dx/ y=h )/ w0] = 1–[1-F c(Na)] [M()+P(Pr) ·Q(Gz –1)] was found to hold over the practical range of parameters involved, where Na, Gz, and Pr denote the Nahme-Griffith number, Graetz number, and Prandtl number; is a dimensionless variable which depends on Na and Gz. An order-of-magnitude analysis for momentum and energy equations supports the validity of this expression. The function F c(Na) was obtained from an analytical solution for thermally developed flow; F c(Na) = 1 for isothermal flow. M(), P(Pr), and Q(Gz) were obtained by fitting numerical results with simple equations. The wall shear rate at the inlet can be calculated from the flow rate Q using the isothermal equation.Notation x,y Cartesian coordinates (Fig. 2) - , dimensionless spatial variables [Eq. (16)] - dimensionless variable, : = Gz(x)–1 - dimensionless variable [Eq. (28)] - t,t * time, dimensionless time [Eq. (16)] - , velocity vector, dimensionless velocity vector - x , velocity in x-direction, dimensionless velocity - y , velocity in y-direction, dimensionless velocity - V average velocity in x-direction - yy , * normal stress on y-planes, dimensionless normal stress - shear stress on y-planes acting in x-direction - w , w * value of shear stress stress at the wall, dimensionless wall shear stress - w0, w0 * wall shear stress at the inlet, dimensionless variable - , * rate-of-strain tensor, dimensionless tensor - wall shear rate, wall shear rate at the inlet - Q flow rate - T, T 0, temperature, temperature at the wall and at the inlet, dimensionless temperature - h, w half the die height, width of the die - l,L the distance between the inlet and the slot region, total die length - T 2, T 3, T 4 pressure transducers in the High Shear Rate Viscometer (HSRV) (Fig. 1) - P, P2, P3 pressure, liquid pressures applied to T 2 and T 3 - , 0, * viscosity, viscosity at T = T 0, dimensionless viscosity - viscosity-temperature coefficient [Eq. (8)] - k thermal conductivity - C p specific heat at constant pressure - Re Reynolds number - Na Nahme-Griffith number - Gz Graetz number - Pr Prandtl number  相似文献   

11.
A hot-film probe has been used to measure slip of high-density polyethylene flowing through a conduit with a rectangular cross section. A transition from no slip to a stick-slip condition has been observed and associated with irregular extrudate shape. Appreciable extrudate roughness was initiated at the same flow rate as that at which the relationship between Nusselt number and Péclet number for heat transfer from the probe departed from the behavior expected for a no-slip condition at the conduit wall. A 1 constant defined by eq. (A3) - C dimensionless group used in eq. (7) - C p heat capacity - D constant in eq. (13) - f u s/u - f lin defined by eq. (A6) - G storage modulus - G loss modulus - k thermal conductivity - L length of hot film in thex-direction - L eff effective length of large probe found from eq. (A3) - Nu L Nusselt number, defined for a lengthL by eq. (2) - (Nu L)0 value ofNu L atPe = 0 (eq. (A 1)) - Pe Péclet number,uL/ - Pe 0 Péclet number in slip flow, eq. (6) - Pe 1 Péclet number in shear flow, eq. (4) - q L average heat flux over hot film of lengthL - R i resistances defined by figure 8 - R AB correlation coefficient defined by eq. (14) for signalsA andB - T temperature - T s temperature of probe surface - T ambient temperature - T T sT - u average velocity - u s slip velocity - V b voltage indicated in figure 8 - W probe dimension (figure 6) - x distance in flow direction (figure 1) - y distance perpendicular to flow direction (figure 1) - thermal diffusivity,k/C p - wall shear rate - 5% thickness of lubricating layer during probe calibration for introduction of an error no greater than 5%; see Appendix I - * complex viscosity - density - time - c critical shear stress, eq. (13) - w wall shear stress - frequency characterizing extrudate distortion (figures 12 and 13), or frequency of oscillation during rheometric characterization (figures 18–20) - * quantity obtained from normalized Nusselt number, eq. (A1), or complex viscosity * - A actual (small) probe (see Appendix I) - M model (large) probe (see Appendix I)  相似文献   

12.
Assuming the formation of doublets in the flow according to a mass action law, the shear rate and the concentration dependence of the extinction angle, of the birefringence, and of the average coil expansion are calculated for dilute solutions of flexible macromolecules. It is shown that this reversible association process has a strong influence on the measurable parameters in a flow birefringence experiment. c concentration (g/cm3) - h 2 mean square end-to-end distance at shear rate - h 0 2 mean-square end-to-end distance at zero-shear rate - n refractive index of the solution (not very different from the solvent for a very dilute solution) - E mean coil expansion - K 0,K constant of the mass action law - M molecular weight - R G gas constant - T absolute temperature - 12 optical anisotropy of the segment - 0 Deborah number: - Deborah number: - shear rate - 0, reduced concentration - s viscosity of the solvent - [] 0 intrinsic viscosity at zero-shear rate - [] intrinsic viscosity at shear rate - extinction angle - N a Avodagro's number - n magnitude of the birefringence  相似文献   

13.
Dynamic material functions of polymeric systems are calculated via a defect-diffusion model. The random motion of defects is modelled by a fractaltime stochastic process. It is shown that the dynamic functions of polymeric solutions can be approximated by the defect-diffusion process of the mixed type. The relaxation modulus of Kohlrausch type is obtained for a fractal-time defect-diffusion process, and it is shown that this modulus is capable of portraying the dynamic behavior of typical viscoelastic solutions.The Fourier transforms of the Kohlrausch function are calculated to obtain and. A three-parameter model for and is compared with the previous calculations. Experimental measurements for five polymer solutions are compared with model predictions. D rate of deformation tensor - G(t) mechanical relaxation modulus - H relaxation spectrum - I(t) flux of defects - P n (s) probability of finding a walker ats aftern-steps - P generating function ofP n (s) - s(t) fraction of surviving defects - , () gamma function (incomplete) - 0 zero shear viscosity - * () complex viscosity - frequency - t n n-th moment - F[] Fourier transform - f * (u) Laplace transform off(t) - , components of * - G f, f * fractional model - G 3, 3 * three parameter model - complex conjugate ofz - material time derivative ofD  相似文献   

14.
Response of an elastic Bingham fluid to oscillatory shear   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The response of an elastic Bingham fluid to oscillatory strain has been modeled and compared with experiments on an oil-in-water emulsion. The newly developed model includes elastic solid deformation below the yield stress (or strain), and Newtonian flow above the yield stress. In sinusoidal oscillatory deformations at low strain amplitudes the stress response is sinusoidal and in phase with the strain. At large strain amplitudes, above the yield stress, the stress response is non-linear and is out of phase with strain because of the storage and release of elastic recoverable strain. In oscillatory deformation between parallel disks the non-uniform strain in the radial direction causes the location of the yield surface to move in-and-out during each oscillation. The radial location of the yield surface is calculated and the resulting torque on the stationary disk is determined. Torque waveforms are calculated for various strains and frequencies and compared to experiments on a model oil-in-water emulsion. Model parameters are evaluated independently: the elastic modulus of the emulsion is determined from data at low strains, the yield strain is determined from the phase shift between torque and strain, and the Bingham viscosity is determined from the frequency dependence of the torque at high strains. Using these parameters the torque waveforms are predicted quantitatively for all strains and frequencies. In accord with the model predictions the phase shift is found to depend on strain but to be independent of frequency.Notation A plate strain amplitude (parallel plates) - A R plate strain amplitude at disk edge (parallel disks) - G elastic modulus - m torque (parallel disks) - M normalized torque (parallel disks) = 2m/R 30 - N ratio of viscous to elastic stresses (parallel plates) =µ A/ 0 ratio of viscous to elastic stresses (parallel disks) =µ A R/0 - r normalized radial position (parallel disks) =r/R - r radial position (parallel disks) - R disk radius (parallel disks) - t normalized time = t — /2 - t time - E elastic strain - P plate strain (displacement of top plate or disk divided by distance between plates or disks) - PR plate strain at disk edge (parallel disks) - 0 yield strain - E normalized elastic strain = E/0 - P normalized plate strain = P/0 - PR normalized plate strain at disk edge (parallel disks) = PR/0 - 0 normalized plate strain amplitude (parallel plates) =A/ 0 — normalized plate strain amplitude at disk edge (parallel disks) =A R/0 - phase shift between P andT (parallel plates) — phase shift between PR andM (parallel disks) - µ Bingham viscosity - stress - 0 yield stress - T normalized stress =/ 0 - frequency  相似文献   

15.
A three-parameter model describing the shear rate-shear stress relation of viscoelastic liquids and in which each parameter has a physical significance, is applied to a tangential annular flow in order to calculate the velocity profile and the shear rate distribution. Experiments were carried out with a 5000 wppm aqueous solution of polyacrylamide and different types of rheometers. In a shear-rate range of seven decades (5 10–3 s–1 < < 1.2 105 s–1) a good agreement is obtained between apparent viscosities calculated with our model and those measured with three different types of rheometers, i.e. Couette rheometers, a cone-and-plate rheogoniometer and a capillary tube rheometer. a physical quantity defined by:a = {1 – ( / 0)}/ 0 (Pa–1) - C constant of integration (1) - r distancer from the center (m) - r 1,r 2 radius of the inner and outer cylinder (m) - v r local tangential velocity at a distancer from the center (v r = r r) (m s–1) - v 2 local tangential velocity at a distancer 2 from the center (m s–1) - shear rate (s–1) - local shear rate (s–1) - 1 wall shear rate at the inner cylinder (s–1) - dynamic viscosity (Pa s) - a apparent viscosity (a = / ) (Pa s) - a1 apparent viscosity at the inner cylinder (Pa s) - 0 zero-shear viscosity (Pa s) - infinite-shear viscosity (Pa s) - shear stress (Pa) - r local shear stress at a distancer from the center (Pa) - 0 yield stress (Pa) - 1, 2 wall shear-stress at the inner and outer cylinder (Pa) - r local angular velocity (s–1) - 2 angular velocity of the outer cylinder (s–1)  相似文献   

16.
Neck propagation in the stretching of elastic solid filaments having a yield point was analyzed using the space one-dimensional thin filament governing equations developed previously by the authors and other researchers. Constitutive model for the filament was assumed to be expressible as engineering tensile stress(X) (tensile force) given as a function of elongational strain with the(X) curve having a yield point maxima followed by a minima and a breaking point greater than the yield point maxima. Also incorporated into the model is the hysteresis of irreversible plastic deformation. When inertia is taken into consideration, the thin filament equations were found to reduce to the nonlinear wave equation 2 (X)/ 2 =C 1 2 X/ 2 where is Lagrangean space coordinate, is time, andC 1 is inertia coefficient. The above nonlinear wave equation yields a solutionX(, ) having a stepwise discontinuity inX which propagates along the axis. The zero speed limit of the step wave solution was found to describe the above neck propagation occurring in solid filaments. Furthermore, it was recognized that the nonlinear wave equation was known for many years to also govern the plastic shock wave which propagates axially within a metal rod subjected to a very strong impact on its end. The one-dimensional atmospheric shock wave also was known to be governed by the nonlinear wave equation upon making certain simplifying assumptions. The above and other evidences lead to the conclusion that neck propagation occurring in the extension of solid filament obeying the above(X) function can be formally described as a shock wave.  相似文献   

17.
We are concerned with the coerciveness of the strain energy E(u) (in linear elasticity) associated with a displacement vector u on the Sobolev space H1 () or its subspaces, a domain in n representing an isotropic elastic body—certain specific cases are called Korn's inequalities. Sufficient (and necessary) conditions on the Lamé moduli for E(·) to be coercive (or uniformly positive) on such spaces are given, and the associated best possible constants are obtained for some cases.  相似文献   

18.
In solutions of ABA-triblock copolymers in a poor solvent for A thermoreversible gelation can occur. A three-dimensional dynamic network may form and, given the polymer and the solvent, its structure will depend on temperature and polymer mass fraction. The zero-shear rate viscosity of solutions of the triblock-copolymer polystyrene-polyisoprene-polystyrene in n-tetradecane was measured as a function of temperature and polymer mass fraction, and analyzed; the polystyrene blocks contained about 100 monomers, the polyisoprene blocks about 2000 monomers. Empirically, in the viscosity at constant mass fraction plotted versus inverse temperature, two contributions could be discerned; one contribution dominating at high and the other one dominating at low temperatures. In a comparison with theory, the contribution dominating at low temperatures was identified with the Lodge transient network viscosity; some questions remain to be answered, however. An earlier proposal for defining the gelation temperature T gel is specified for the systems considered, and leads to a gelation curve; T gel as a function of polymer mass fraction.Mathematical symbols {} functional dependence; e.g., f{x} means f is a function of x - p log logarithm to the base number p; e.g., 10log is the common logarithm - exp exponential function with base number e - sin trigonometric sine function - lim limit operation - – in integral sign: Cauchy Principal Value of integral, e.g., - derivative to x - partial derivative to x Latin symbols dimensionless constant - b constant with dimension of absolute temperature - constant with dimension of absolute temperature - B dimensionless constant - c mass fraction - dimensionless constant - constant with dimension of absolute temperature - d * dimensionless constant - D{0} constant with dimension of absolute temperature - e base number of natural (or Naperian) logarithm - g distribution function of inverse relaxation times - G relaxation strength relaxation function - h distribution function of relaxation times reaction constant enthalpy of a molecule - H Heaviside unit step function - i complex number defined by i 2 = –1 - j{0} constant with dimension of viscosity - j index number - k Boltzmann's constant - k H Huggins' coefficient - m mass of a molecule - n number - N number - p index number - s entropy of a molecule - t time - T absolute temperature Greek symbols as index: type of polymer molecule - as index: type of polymer molecule - shear as index: type of polymer molecule - shear rate - small variation; e.g. T is a small variation in T relative deviation Dirac delta distribution as index: type of polymer molecule - difference; e.g. is a difference in chemical potential - constant with dimension of absolute temperature - (complex) viscosity - constant with dimension of viscosity - [] intrinsic viscosity number - inverse of relaxation time - chemical potential - number pi; circle circumference divided by its diameter - mass per unit volume - relaxation time shear stress - angular frequency  相似文献   

19.
Résumé Ce travail porte sur l'étude de solutions diluées d'un polymère de l'acide acrylique dans l'eau (concentration en poids 0,1%). Ce fluide présente des effets de seuil. La mesure du champ de vitesse par vélocimétrie laser permet une détermination précise de l'indice rhéologique,n, étant un paramètre essentiel de la loi de comportement proposée: . Les autres constantes peuvent être déduites d'essais rhéologiques classiques, à fort taux de cisaillement. Il est possible de corriger le gradient de pression mesuréP/L, afin d'obtenir la valeur véritable de ce gradient, notéedp/dz. L'analyse de l'écoulement dans un élargissement brusque montre que le seuil a une forte influence sur les zones de recirculation.
This work deals with the study of very dilute solutions of polyacrylic acid in water (weight concentration about 0.1%). These fluids seem to exhibit a yield effect. The determination of the fully developed velocity field by laser velocimetry allows us an accurate determination of the rheological indexn which is an essential parameter for the proposed rheological relationship: . Other constants can be determined from classical rheological experiments (high shear strain). It is possible to correct the experimental pressure gradientP/L so as to get the real value, noted asdp/dz. An analysis of the flow in an abrupt expansion shows that the yield effect strongly influences the recirculation zones.

D, d m diamètre intérieur d'une conduite cylindrique - C % concentration en poids - s Pa seuil de contrainte - K consistance - gradient de vitesse axiale - gradient pariétal de vitesse axiale - Pa s viscosité pour - Pa contrainte de cisaillement - m/s vitesse débitante - n indice de structure - dp/dz Pa/m gradient longitudinal de pression - z m abscisse longitudinale - u m/s vitesse axiale - écart entre le gradient de pression effectif et le gradient mesuré en Pa - P Pa différence de pression mesurée - L m distance entre 2 prises de pression - A Pa constante intervenant dans l'expression de - B 10–3 Pa s constante intervenant dans l'expression de  相似文献   

20.
The pseudoplastic flow of suspensions, alumina or styrene-acrylamide copolymer particles in water or an aqueous solution of glycerin has been studied by the step-shear-rate method. The relation between the shear rate,D, and the shear stress,, in the step-shear-rate measurements, where the state of dispersion was considered to be constant, was expressed as = AD 1/2 +CD. The effective solid volume fraction,ø F, andA were dependent on the shear rate and expressed byø F =aD b andA = D . Combining the above relations, the steady flow curve was expressed by = D 1/2 + + 0 (1 – a D b/0.74)–1.85 D, where 0 is the viscosity of the medium.With an increase in solid volume fraction and a decreases in the absolute value of the-potential, the flow behavior of the suspensions changed from Newtonian ( = = b = 0), slightly pseudoplastic ( = b = 0), pseudoplastic ( = 0) to a Bingham-like behavior.The change in viscosity of the medium had an effect on the change in the effective volume fraction.  相似文献   

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