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1.
The solutions of the continuity equation and the equations of motion of the flow in the vicinity of a rotating disk have been established for an Ostwald fluid under steady-state conditions and in modulated flow around a mean value. Under steady-state conditions, the kinematics of the flow is scarcely dependent on the rheological parameters close to the disk, however, for n < 1 long-range effects have been put forward. For modulated flow, in the high-frequency range, a behaviour very different from that observed for a Newtonian fluid was found. In the low-frequency range an asymptotic solution has been proposed which is of special interest in mass transfer problems.Presented at the Second Conference of European Rheologists, Prague, June 17–20, 1986  相似文献   

2.
A microstructure model for SBS and SIS triblock copolymers with hard domains as multifunctional reinforcing fillers is proposed. Based on this model and proposed mechanism of large deformations, the probability distribution function of the end-to-end vector for each constituent chain and the free energy of deformation for the total networks was calculated by the combination of statistical thermodynamics and kinetics. A new molecular theory of non-linear visco-elasticity for SBS and SIS at large deformations is presented. It is successful in relating the viscoelastic state to molecular constitution by three important parameters (C 100,C 020, andC 200) of the networks. The relations of stress to strain for four types of deformation, the elastic modulus and the constitutive equation for the stress relaxation were derived from this theory. It provides a theoretical foundation for studying the relationships of multiphase network structures and mechanical properties at large deformations. An excellent agreement between the theoretical relationships and experimental data from the experiments and the reference was obtained.Project supported by the National Natural Foundation of China  相似文献   

3.
The stability of the Couette flow of the liquid with the power law viscosity in a wide annular gap has been investigated theoretically in this work with the aid of the method of small disturbances. The Taylor number, being a criterion of the stability, has been defined using the mean apparent viscosity value in the main flow. In the whole range of the radius ratio, R i /R o and the flow index, n, considered (R i /R o 0.5, n = 0.25–1.75 ), the critical value of the Taylor number Ta c is an increasing function of the flow index, i.e., shear thinning has destabilizing influence on the rotational flow, and dilatancy exhibits an opposite tendency.In the wide ranges of the flow index, n > 0.5, and the radius ratio, R i /R o > 0.5, the wide-gap effect on the stability limit is predicted to be almost the same for non-Newtonian fluids as for Newtonian ones. The ratio on the critical Taylor numbers for non-Newtonian and Newtonian fluids: Ta c (n) and Ta c (n = 1) obey a generalized functional dependence: Ta c (n)/Ta c (n = 1) = g(n), where g(n) is a function corresponding to the solution for the narrow gap approximation.Theoretical predictions have been compared with experimental results for pseudoplastic liquids. In the range of the radius ratio R i /R o > 0.6 the theoretical stability limit is in good agreement with the experiments, however, for R i /R o < 0.6, the critical Taylor number is considerably lower than predicted by theory.  相似文献   

4.
The stability of the laminar helical flow of pseudoplastic liquids has been investigated with an indirect method consisting in the measurement of the rate of mass transfer at the surface of the inner rotating cylinder. The experiments have been carried out for different values of the geometric parameter = R 1/R 2 (the radius ratio) in the range of small values of the Reynolds number,Re < 200. Water solutions of CMC and MC have been used as pseudoplastic liquids obeying the power law model. The results have been correlated with the Taylor and Reynolds numbers defined with the aid of the mean viscosity value. The stability limit of the Couette flow is described by a functional dependence of the modified critical Taylor number (including geometric factor) on the flow indexn. This dependence, general for pseudoplastic liquids obeying the power law model, is close to the previous theoretical predictions and displays destabilizing influence of pseudoplasticity on the rotational motion. Beyond the initial range of the Reynolds numbers values (Re>20), the stability of the helical flow is not affected considerably by the pseudoplastic properties of liquids. In the range of the monotonic stabilization of the helical flow the stability limit is described by a general dependence of the modified Taylor number on the Reynolds number. The dependence is general for pseudoplastic as well as Newtonian liquids.Nomenclature C i concentration of reaction ions, kmol/m3 - d = R 2R 1 gap width, m - F M () Meksyn's geometric factor (Eq. (1)) - F 0 Faraday constant, C/kmol - i l density of limit current, A/m3 - k c mass transfer coefficient, m/s - n flow index - R 1,R 2 inner, outer radius of the gap, m - Re = V m ·2d·/µ m Reynolds number - Ta c = c ·d3/2·R 1 1/2 ·/µ m Taylor number - Z i number of electrons involved in electrochemical reaction - = R 1/R 2 radius ratio - µ apparent viscosity (local), Ns/m2 - µ m mean apparent viscosity value (Eq. (3)), Ns/m2 - µ i apparent viscosity value at a surface of the inner cylinder, Ns/m2 - density, kg/m3 - c angular velocity of the inner cylinder (critical value), 1/s  相似文献   

5.
The torsional creep and recoverable bahaviour of a technical polystyrene is reported over seven orders of magnitude of the value of the compliance from 10–8 to 10–1 Pa–1 and over more than seven decades in time. The results for the recoverable compliance JR (t) reveal a dispersion region seen between the glass transition and the steady-state recoverable compliance Je. The limiting value of the final dispersion Je = 4.7 · 10–4 Pa–1 indicates a broad molecular-weight distribution. The steady-state recoverable compliance Je is independent of the temperature. The temperature dependence of the final dispersion was found to be indistinguishable from that of viscous flow. However, this temperature dependence differs significantly from that of the glass-rubber transition. A proposal has been made for the construction of creep compliance and recoverable compliance over an extended time scale.  相似文献   

6.
Superposition of oscillatory shear imposed from the boundary and through pressure gradient oscillations and simple shear is investigated. The integral fluid with fading memory shows flow enhancement effects due to the nonlinear structure. Closed-form expressions for the change in the mass transport rate are given at the lowest significant order in the perturbation algorithm. The elasticity of the liquid plays as important a role in determining the enhancement as does the shear dependent viscosity. Coupling of shear thinning and elasticity may produce sharp increases in the flow rate. The interaction of oscillatory shear components may generate a steady flow, either longitudinal or orthogonal, resulting in increases in flow rates akin to resonance, and due to frequency cancellation, even in the absence of a mean gradient. An algorithm to determine the constitutive functions of the integral fluid of order three is outlined.Nomenclature A n Rivlin-Ericksen tensor of order . - A k Non-oscillatory component of the first order linear viscoelastic oscillatory velocity field induced by the kth wave in the pressure gradient - d Half the gap between the plates - e x, e z Unit vectors in the longitudinal and orthogonal directions, respectively - G(s) Relaxation modulus - G History of the deformation - Stress response functional - I() Enhancement defined as the ratio of the frequency dependent part of the discharge to the frequencyindependent part of it at the third order - I *() Enhancement defined as the ratio of the increase in discharge due to oscillations to the total discharge without the oscillations - k Power index in the relaxation modulus G(s) - k i –1 Relaxation times in the Maxwell representation of the quadratic shear relaxation modulus (s 1, s 2) - m i –1, n i –1 Relaxation times in the Maxwell representations of the constitutive functions 1(s 1,s 2,s 3) and 4 (s 1, s 2,s 3), respectively - P Constant longitudinal pressure gradient - p Pressure field - mx ,(3) nz ,(3) Mean volume transport rates at the third order in the longitudinal and orthogonal directions, respectively - 0,(3), 1,(3) Frequency independent and dependent volume transport rates, respectively, at the third order - s = t- Difference between present and past times t and   相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
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   

9.
Suspensions consisting of particles of colloidal dimensions have been reported to form connected structures. When attractive forces act between particles in suspension they may flocculate and, depending on particle concentration, shear history and other parameters, flocs may build-up in a three-dimensional network which spans the suspension sample. In this paper a floc network model is introduced to interpret the elastic behavior of flocculated suspensions at small deformations. Elastic percolation concepts are used to explain the variation of the elastic modulus with concentration. Data taken from the suspension rheology literature, and new results with suspensions of magnetic -Fe2O3 and non-magnetic -Fe2O3 particles in mineral oil are interpreted with the model proposed.Non-zero elastic modulus appeared at threshold particle concentrations of about 0.7 vol.% and 0.4 vol.% of the magnetic and non-magnetic suspensions, respectively. The difference is attributed to the denser flocs formed by magnetic suspensions. The volume fraction of particles in the flocs was estimated from the threshold particle concentration by transforming this concentration into a critical volume concentration of flocs, and identifying this critical concentration with the theoretical percolation threshold of three-dimensional networks of different coordination numbers. The results obtained indicate that the flocs are low-density structures, in agreement with cryo-scanning electron micrographs. Above the critical concentration the dynamic elastic modulus G was found to follow a scaling law of the type G ( f - f c ) f , where f is the volume fraction of flocs in suspension, and f c is its threshold value. For magnetic suspensions the exponent f was found to rise from a low value of about 1.0 to a value of 2.26 as particle concentration was increased. For the non-magnetic a similar change in f was observed; f changed from 0.95 to 3.6. Two other flocculated suspension systems taken from the literature showed a similar change in exponent. This suggests the possibility of a change in the mechanism of stress transport in the suspension as concentration increases, i.e., from a floc-floc bond-bending force mechanism to a rigidity percolation mechanism.  相似文献   

10.
A purely elastic transition in Taylor-Couette flow   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Experimental evidence of a non-inertial, cellular instability in the Taylor-Couette flow of a viscoelastic fluid is presented. A linear stability analysis for an Oldroyd-B fluid, which is successful in describing many features of the experimental fluid, predicts the critical Deborah number,De c , at which the instability is observed. The dependence ofDe c on the value of the dimensionless gap between the cylinders is also determined.This paper is dedicated to Professor Hanswalter Giesekus on the occasion of his retirement as Editor of Rheologica Acta.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
To investigate the viscoelastic behavior of fluid dispersions under steady shear flow conditions, an apparatus for parallel superimposed oscillations has been constructed which consists of a rotating cup containing the liquid under investigation in which a torsional pendulum is immersed. By measuring the resonance frequency and bandwidth of the resonator in both liquid and in air, the frequency and steady-shear-rate-dependent complex shear modulus can be obtained. By exchange of the resonator lumps it is possible to use the instrument at four different frequencies: 85, 284, 740, and 2440 Hz while the steady shear rate can be varied from 1 to 55 s–1. After treatment of the theoretical background, design, and measuring procedure, the calibration with a number of Newtonian liquids is described and the accuracy of the instrument is discussed.Notation a radius of the lump - A geometrical constant - b inner radius of the sample holder - c constant - C 1, C 2 apparatus constants - D damping of the pendulum - e x , e y , e z Cartesian basis - e r , e , e z orthonormal cylindrical basis - E geometrical constant - E t , 0 E t , t relative strain tensor - f function of shear rate - F t relative deformation tensor - G (t) memory function - G * complex shear modulus - G Re(G * ) - G Im(G * ) - h distance between plates - H * transfer function - , functional - i imaginary unit: i 2= – 1 - I moment of inertia - J exc excitation current - J 0 amplitude of J exc - k * = kik complex wave number - K torsional constant - K fourth order tensor - l length of the lump - L mutual inductance - M dr driving torque - M liq torque exerted by the liquid - 0 M liq, liq steady state and dynamic part of Mliq - n power of the shear rate - p isotropic pressure - Q quality factor - r radial position - R,R 0, R c Re(Z *, Z 0 * , Z c * ) - s time - t, t time - T temperature - T, 0 T, stress tensor - u velocity - U lock-in output - 0 velocity - V det detector output voltage - V sig, V cr signal and cross-talk part of V det - x Cartesian coordinate - X , X 0, X c Im(Z *, Z 0 * , Z c * ) - y Cartesian coordinate - z Cartesian coordinate, axial position  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
The stability of a laminar helical flow of pseudoplastic liquids in an annular gap with a rotating inner cylinder is investigated theoretically. The analysis is carried out under the assumption of a torroidal form of the secondary flow (torroidal Taylor vortices) for the narrow gap geometry. The power law model has been applied to describe the pseudoplasticity of liquids. The problem of the stability has been formulated with the aid of the method of small disturbances, and solved using the Galerkin method. In order to describe the stability limit the Reynolds and Taylor numbers defined with the aid of the mean viscosity value have been introduced. It has been found that pseudoplasticity has a considerably destabilizing influence on the Couette motion as well as on the helical flow in the initial range of the Reynolds number values (Re<30). A decrease of the flow index value,n, is accompanied by a decrease of the critical value of the Taylor number. This destabilizing effect of pseudoplasticity vanishes in the range of the larger values of the Reynolds number. In the rangeRe>30, the stability limit of the flow of pseudoplastic liquids can be described by a general dependence of the critical valueTa c onRe, which is consistent with results obtained for the case of Newtonian fluids. a frequency number (Eq. (27)), 1/s - b wave number (Eq. (27)), 1/m - B = M/N parameter - d = R 2R 1 gap width, m - f(y, B, k) function of viscosity distribution (Eq. (7)) - f 0 (x) function of viscosity distribution (narrow gap Eq. (35)) - F(x) = V(x)/V m dimensionless distribution of axial flow velocity - G(x) = U(x) i dimensionless distribution of angular flow velocity - K consistency coefficient, N sn/m2 - M = (P/L)R 2 parameter of the stress field (Eq. (1)), N/m2 - M 0 torque per unit length, N - n flow index - N = M 0/(2R 2 2 ) parameter of the stress field (Eq. (1)), N/m2 - p = 1/2n–1/2 parameter - pressure disturbance amplitude, N/m2 - p pressure disturbance, N/m2 - (P/L) pressure drop per unit length of the gap, N/m2 - r radial coordinate, m - r m location of the maximum value of the axial velocity, m - R 1,R 2 inner, outer radius of the annulus, m - Re = V m 2d/ m Reynolds number - S = (P/L · d/N) parameteer of the stress field (narrow gap) - t time, s - Ta = i d 3/2 R 1 1/2 / m Taylor number - U tangential velocity, m/s - U i tangential velocity at the surface of the inner cylinder, m/s - V axial velocity, m/s - V m mean axial velocity, m/s - V disturbance vector of velocity field, m/s - amplitude of theV k -disturbance, m/s - X, Y, Z functions in Eqs. (36–38) - y = r/R 2 dimensionless radial coordinate - x = (r—(R 1+R 2)/2)d radial coordinate (narrow gap) - L 1 L 4 linear operators in Eqs. (36–38) - = ad/V m dimensionless frequency number - = b·d dimensionless wave number - component of the rate of strain tensor, 1/s - component of the rate of strain tensor corresponding to the disturbance, 1/s - = R 1/R 2 radius ratio - apparent viscosity, Ns/m2 - 0 apparent viscosity in the main flow, Ns/m2 - µ disturbance of the apparent viscosity, Ns/m2 - µ m mean apparent viscosity, Ns/m2 - density, kg/m3 - ij component of the stress tensor, N/m2 - angular velocity, rad/s - i angular velocity of the inner cylinder, rad/s  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
The stability of Taylor-Couette flow of entangled polymeric solutions to small axisymmetric stationary disturbances is analyzed using the Doi-Edwards constitutive equation in the small gap limit. A previous analysis of Karlsson, Sokolov, and Tanner for the general K-BKZ equation, of which the Doi-Edwards equation is a special case, reduces the problem to one of numerically evaluating seven viscoelastic functions of the shear rate in the gap. Of these seven, only three — two of which are related to the second normal stress difference, and one of them to shear thinning — significantly affect the flow stability. The negative second normal stress difference of the Doi-Edwards fluid stabilizes the flow at low values of the Weissenberg number 1 , while shear thinning produces strong destabilization at moderate Weissenberg number. Here 1 is the longest relaxation time. Non-monotonic effects of viscoelasticity on Taylor-Couette stability analogous to those predicted here have been observed in experiments of Giesekus. The extreme shear thinning of the Doi-Edwards fluid is also predicted to produce a large growth in the height of the Taylor cells, a phenomenon that has been seen experimentally by Beavers and Joseph.  相似文献   

17.
An analysis of particle orientation in a dilute suspension of rodlike particles in a second-order fluid was performed to examine the effects of the elasticity of the fluid and of weak Brownian diffusion of the particle on its orientation. Distributions of particle orientation under a simple shear flow with rate of shearg have been obtained as a function of a single nondimensional parameter, * =/r e 2 (D/g), which combines the effects of the particle aspect ratior e , the weak fluid elasticity, and the weak Brownian rotation diffusion coefficientD of the particle. In the limit of larger e , when the fluid elasticity is strong enough to overcome the rotational diffusion effect on the particle motion, most of the particles will orient close to the vorticity axis. A new shear-thinning mechanism of the shear viscosity of such systems is predicted by the theory.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Two series of polypropylene samples of different molecular weight, the first obtained directly from polymerization reactions and the second from controlled thermal degradation, were studied by dynamic testing in the melt state. Several viscoelastic parameters were determined, and correlated with weight-average molecular weightM w . It is found that theM w -dependence of the two series is rather different.  相似文献   

20.
The rheological properties of glass fibre-filled polypropylene melts have been investigated. A high pressure capillary rheometer has been used for the experimental study. The effect of shear rate, temperature, and fibre concentration on the melt viscosity and viscoelastic properties have been studied. An equation has been proposed to correlate the melt viscosity with shear rate, temperature and fibre content. A master curve relation on this basis has been brought out using the shift factora T . a T shift factor (=/ r ) - A i coefficients of the polynomical of eq. (1) (i = 0, 1, 2, ,n) - B constant in the AFE equation (eq. (2)) (Pa s) - B constant in eq. (3) - D extrudate diameter - d capillary diameter - activation energy at constant shear rate (kcal/mole) - E activation energy at constant shear stress (kcal/mole) - T melt temperature (K) - X fraction glass fibre by weight - shear rate (s–1) - shear viscosity (Pa s) - normal stress coefficient (Pa s2) - 1 2 first normal-stress difference (Pa) - shear stress (Pa) - r at reference temperature  相似文献   

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