Abstract: | Shear banding occurs in complex fluids that exhibit a non-monotonic constitutive instability, such as wormlike micelles, and potentially also in polymeric fluids with presumably monotonic constitutive behavior. However, velocity profiles for shear thinning fluids in geometries possessing a stress gradient, such as Taylor-Couette flow, could be misidentified as shear banding. To address this, we present a model-free experimental procedure to distinguish shear banding from strong shear thinning using high-resolution velocimetry. The approach is developed and validated using simulations using the d-Giesekus model and is based upon the behavior of the width of the apparent interface between the high and low shear rate regions. It is then tested using experimental data for model wormlike micellar solutions. The method allows shear banding to be distinguished from shear thinning in cases where this difference is otherwise indistinguishable. As a by-product, it also provides an estimate of the stress diffusivities for shear banding fluids. |