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1.
The influence of maneuvering on the chaotic response of a fluttering buckled plate on an aircraft has been studied. The governing equations, derived using Lagrangian mechanics, include geometric non-linearities associated with the occurrence of tensile stresses, as well as coupling between the angular velocity of the maneuver and the elastic degrees of freedom. Numerical simulation for periodic and chaotic responses are conducted in order to analyze the influence of the pull-up maneuver on the dynamic behavior of the panel. Long-time histories phase-plane plots, and power spectra of the responses are presented. As the maneuver (load factor) increases, the system exhibits complicated dynamic behavior including a direct and inverse cascade of subharmonic bifurcations, intermittency, and chaos. Beside these classical routes of transition from a periodic state to chaos, our calculations suggest amplitude modulation as a possible new mode of transition to chaos. Consequently this research contributes to the understanding of the mechanisms through which the transition between periodic and strange attractors occurs in, dissipative mechanical systems. In the case of a prescribed time dependent maneuver, a remarkable transition between the different types of limit cycles is presented.Nomenclature a plate length - a r u r /h - D plate bending stiffness - E modulus of elasticity - g acceleration due to gravity - h plate thickness - j1,j2,j3 base vectors of the body frame of reference - K spring constant - M Mach number - n 1 + 0/g - N 1 applied in-plane force - pp aerodynamic pressure - P pa 4/Dh - q 0/2 - Q r generalized Lagrangian forces - R rotation matrix - R 4 N, a 2/D - t time - kinetic energy - u plate deflection - u displacement of the structure - u r modal amplitude - v0 velocity - x coordinates in the inertial frame of reference - z coordinates in the body frame of reference - Ka/(Ka+Eh) - - elastic energy - 2qa 3/D - a/mh - Poisson's ratio - material coordinates - air density - m plate density - - r prescribed functions - r sin(r z/a) - angular velocity - a/v0 - skew-symmetric matrix form of the angular velocity  相似文献   

2.
An attempt is made to incorporate into a quasilinear viscoelastic constitutive equation of the Boltzmann superposition type the two mirror relations of Gleissle, as well as his relation between the steady-state first normal-stress difference and the shear viscosity curve. It is shown that the three relations can hold separately within this constitutive model, but not simultaneously, because they require a different nonlinear strain measure, namelyS 12 () = – a ( – 1) (a = 0 for 1,a = 1 for 1) for the mirroring of the viscosities,S 12 () = – a (–k 2/) (a = 0 for k, a = 1 for k) for the mirroring of the first normal-stress coefficients, and for the third relation. Here denotes the shear strain and erf the error function. Experimental data on melts of a low-density polyethylene, a high-density polyethylene and a polypropylene show that the mirror relations are passable approximations, but that the third relation meets reality surprisingly close if the right value ofk is used.  相似文献   

3.
A one-equation low-Reynolds number turbulence model has been applied successfully to the flow and heat transfer over a circular cylinder in turbulent cross flow. The turbulence length-scale was found to be equal 3.7y up to a distance 0.05 and then constant equal to 0.185 up to the edge of the boundary layer (wherey is the distance from the surface and is the boundary layer thickness).The model predictions for heat transfer coefficient, skin friction factor, velocity and kinetic energy profiles were in good agreement with the data. The model was applied for Re 250,000 and Tu0.07.Nomenclature µ,C D Constants in the turbulence kinetic energy equation - C 1,C 2 Constants in the turbulence length-scale equation - Skin friction coefficient atx - D Cylinder diameter - F Dimensionless flow streamwise velocityu/u e - k Turbulence kinetic energy =1/2 the sum of the squared three fluctuating velocities - K Dimensionless turbulence kinetic energyk/u e /2 - I Dimensionless temperature (T–T w )/(T T w ) - l Turbulence length-scale - l e Turbulence length-scale at outer region - Nu D Nusselt number - p Pressure - Pr Prandtl number - Pr t Turbulent Prandtl number - Pr k Constant in the turbulence kinetic energy equation - R Cylinder radius - Re D Reynolds number u D - Re x Reynolds number u x - R K Reynolds number of turbulence - T Mean temperature - T Mean temperature at ambient - T s Mean temperature at surface - Tu Cross flow turbulence intensity, - u Mean flow streamwise velocity - u Fluctuating streamwise velocity - u e Mean flow velocity at far field distance - u Mean flow velocity at ambient - u* Friction velocity - v Mean velocity normal to surface - V Dimensionless mean velocity normal to surface - x,x 1 Distance along the surface - y Distance normal to surface - Dimensionless pressure gradient parameter - Boundary layer thickness atu=0.9995u e - Transformed coordinate iny direction - Fluid molecular viscosity - t Turbulent viscosity - eff + t - µ Fluid molecular viscosity at ambient - Kinematic viscosity/ - Density - Density at ambient - w Wall shear stress - w,0 Wall shear stress at zero free stream turbulence  相似文献   

4.
The temperature field of starting thermal plumes were measured in a rotating annulus with various rotation rates and buoyancies. The experiments revealed many details of the internal structure of these convective phenomena and also significant horizontal displacements from their source. Measurements show an increase in the maximum temperature observed in the thermal caps with increasing rotation and a more rapid cooling of the buoyancy source.List of symbols D angle relating inward centripetal acceleration to buoyant acceleration, defined by tan D = R/g - g gravitational acceleration - P total pressure of ambient fluid - R radial coordinate measured from rotation axis - R 0 distance from rotation axis to buoyancy source - u velocity of fluid parcel along the radial direction - velocity of fluid parcel along the azimuthal direction - w velocity of fluid parcel along the axial direction - z axial coordinate, measured upward from the plane containing the buoyancy source - density of a buoyant parcel of fluid - 0 density of the ambient fluid - azimuthal angle measured from the radial line passing through the buoyancy source - rotation rate of the R––z coordinate system in radians/second  相似文献   

5.
The rapidly forced pendulum equation with forcing sin((t/), where =<0p,p = 5, for 0, sufficiently small, is considered. We prove that stable and unstable manifolds split and that the splitting distanced(t) in the ( ,t) plane satisfiesd(t) = sin(t/) sech(/2) +O( 0 exp(–/2)) (2.3a) and the angle of transversal intersection,, in thet = 0 section satisfies 2 tan/2 = 2S s = (/2) sech(/2) +O(( 0 /) exp(–/2)) (2.3b) It follows that the Melnikov term correctly predicts the exponentially small splitting and angle of transversality. Our method improves a previous result of Holmes, Marsden, and Scheuerle. Our proof is elementary and self-contained, includes a stable manifold theorem, and emphasizes the phase space geometry.  相似文献   

6.
We consider the parametrized family of equations tt ,u- xx u-au+u 2 2 u=O,x(0,L), with Dirichlet boundary conditions. This equation has finite-dimensional invariant manifolds of solutions. Studying the reduced equation to a four-dimensional manifold, we prove the existence of transversal homoclinic orbits to periodic solutions and of invariant sets with chaotic dynamics, provided that =2, 3, 4,.... For =1 we prove the existence of infinitely many first integrals pairwise in involution.  相似文献   

7.
Stokes flow through a rigid porous medium is analyzed in terms of the method of volume averaging. The traditional averaging procedure leads to an equation of motion and a continuity equation expressed in terms of the volume-averaged pressure and velocity. The equation of motion contains integrals involving spatial deviations of the pressure and velocity, the Brinkman correction, and other lower-order terms. The analysis clearly indicates why the Brinkman correction should not be used to accommodate ano slip condition at an interface between a porous medium and a bounding solid surface.The presence of spatial deviations of the pressure and velocity in the volume-averaged equations of motion gives rise to aclosure problem, and representations for the spatial deviations are derived that lead to Darcy's law. The theoretical development is not restricted to either homogeneous or spatially periodic porous media; however, the problem ofabrupt changes in the structure of a porous medium is not considered.Roman Letters A interfacial area of the - interface contained within the macroscopic system, m2 - A e area of entrances and exits for the -phase contained within the macroscopic system, m2 - A interfacial area of the - interface contained within the averaging volume, m2 - A * interfacial area of the - interface contained within a unit cell, m2 - Ae area of entrances and exits for the -phase contained within a unit cell, m2 - B second order tensor used to represent the velocity deviation (see Equation (3.30)) - b vector used to represent the pressure deviation (see Equation (3.31)), m–1 - d distance between two points at which the pressure is measured, m - g gravity vector, m/s2 - K Darcy's law permeability tensor, m2 - L characteristic length scale for volume averaged quantities, m - characteristic length scale for the -phase (see Figure 2), m - characteristic length scale for the -phase (see Figure 2), m - n unit normal vector pointing from the -phase toward the -phase (n =–n ) - n e unit normal vector for the entrances and exits of the -phase contained within a unit cell - p pressure in the -phase, N/m2 - p intrinsic phase average pressure for the -phase, N/m2 - p p , spatial deviation of the pressure in the -phase, N/m2 - r 0 radius of the averaging volume and radius of a capillary tube, m - v velocity vector for the -phase, m/s - v phase average velocity vector for the -phase, m/s - v intrinsic phase average velocity vector for the -phase, m/s - v v , spatial deviation of the velocity vector for the -phase, m/s - V averaging volume, m3 - V volume of the -phase contained within the averaging volume, m3 Greek Letters V/V, volume fraction of the -phase - mass density of the -phase, kg/m3 - viscosity of the -phase, Nt/m2 - arbitrary function used in the representation of the velocity deviation (see Equations (3.11) and (B1)), m/s - arbitrary function used in the representation of the pressure deviation (see Equations (3.12) and (B2)), s–1  相似文献   

8.
This paper presents a theoretical and numerical investigation of the natural convection boundary-layer along a vertical surface, which is embedded in a porous medium, when the surface heat flux varies as (1 +x 2)), where is a constant andx is the distance along the surface. It is shown that for > -1/2 the solution develops from a similarity solution which is valid for small values ofx to one which is valid for large values ofx. However, when -1/2 no similarity solutions exist for large values ofx and it is found that there are two cases to consider, namely < -1/2 and = -1/2. The wall temperature and the velocity at large distances along the plate are determined for a range of values of .Notation g Gravitational acceleration - k Thermal conductivity of the saturated porous medium - K Permeability of the porous medium - l Typical streamwise length - q w Uniform heat flux on the wall - Ra Rayleigh number, =gK(q w /k)l/(v) - T Temperature - Too Temperature far from the plate - u, v Components of seepage velocity in the x and y directions - x, y Cartesian coordinates - Thermal diffusivity of the fluid saturated porous medium - The coefficient of thermal expansion - An undetermined constant - Porosity of the porous medium - Similarity variable, =y(1+x ) /3/x 1/3 - A preassigned constant - Kinematic viscosity - Nondimensional temperature, =(T – T )Ra1/3 k/qw - Similarity variable, = =y(loge x)1/3/x 2/3 - Similarity variable, =y/x 2/3 - Stream function  相似文献   

9.
Summary In this work, measurement of the flow field around a rotating sphere has been used to obtain the material parameters of a second-order Rivlin-Ericksen fluid. Experiments were carried out with a Laser-Doppler anemometer to obtain the velocity distribution and usingGiesekus' analysis, the material parameters for the second-order fluid were obtained.
Zusammenfassung In dieser Untersuchung wird die Ausmessung des Strömungsfeldes um eine rotierende Kugel dazu verwendet, um die Stoffparameter einer Rivlin-Ericksen-Flüssigkeit zweiter Ordnung zu erhalten. Die Experimente zur Bestimmung der Geschwindigkeitsverteilung werden mit einem Laser-Doppler-Anemometer durchgeführt, und zur Auswertung der Parameter der Flüssigkeit zweiter Ordnung wird eine Analyse vonGiesekus benutzt.

Notations A 1,A2 Rivlin-Ericksen tensor - A 2 Parameter used in eq. [12] - a Radius of the sphere - B Parameter used in eq. [12] - I Unit tensor - m 0(12)/a2, parameter used by ref. (8) - N 1,N2 First and second normal stress difference - p Isotropic pressure - Radial distance from the centre of the rotating body - S 1,S2 Stress tensor - v r,v,v Velocity components in a spherical coordinate system - 0,1,2 Material parameters used in eq. [2] - Shear rate - a Apparent voscosity - 0 Zero-shear viscosity - Angle measured from the axis of rotation - Fluid density - Stream function - Shear stress - Angular velocity With 3 figures  相似文献   

10.
The effects of finite measuring volume length on laser velocimetry measurements of turbulent boundary layers were studied. Four different effective measuring volume lengths, ranging in spanwise extent from 7 to 44 viscous units, were used in a low Reynolds number (Re=1440) turbulent boundary layer with high data density. Reynolds shear stress profiles in the near-wall region show that u v strongly depends on the measuring volume length; at a given y-position, u v decreases with increasing measuring volume length. This dependence was attributed to simultaneous validations on the U and V channels of Doppler bursts coming from different particles within the measuring volume. Moments of the streamwise velocity showed a slight dependence on measuring volume length, indicating that spatial averaging effects well known for hot-films and hot-wires can occur in laser velocimetry measurements when the data density is high.List of symbols time-averaged quantity - u wall friction velocity, ( w /)1/2 - v kinematic viscosity - d p pinhole diameter - l eff spanwise extent of LDV measuring volume viewed by photomultiplier - l + non-dimensional length of measuring volume, l eff u /v - y + non-dimensional coordinate in spanwise direction, y u /v - z + non-dimensional coordinate in spanwise direction, z u /v - U + non-dimensional mean velocity, /u - u instantaneous streamwise velocity fluctuation, U &#x2329;U - v instantaneous normal velocity fluctuation, V–V - u RMS streamwise velocity fluctuation, u 21/2 - v RMS normal velocity fluctuation, v 21/2 - Re Reynolds number based on momentum thickness, U 0/v - R uv cross-correlation coefficient, u v/u v - R12(0, 0, z) two point correlation between u and v with z-separation, <u(0, 0, 0) v (0, 0, z)>/<u(0, 0, 0) v (0, 0, 0)> - N rate at which bursts are validated by counter processor - T Taylor time microscale, u (dv/dt2)–1/2  相似文献   

11.
Zusammenfassung Um bei einem Punktkontakt den Einfluß der EHD-Parameter, a ,u, F undT einzeln an stets demselben Öl untersuchen zu können, wurde eine unter allseitighohem Druck betriebene VKA-Apparatur konstruiert. Die Anpreßkraft wird durch eine im Autoklaven befindliche hydraulische Presse erzeugt, die Kraft und das Drehmoment innerhalb des Autoklaven gemessen. Der Antrieb erfolgt mit einem 5 kW-Motor über eine selbstabdichtende Wellendurchführung.Die Last, bei der die Vollschmierung zusammenbricht, wird bei linearem Verlauf der log – p-Isothermen in Abhängigkeit von a undu befriedigend durch die Formel vonArchard undKirk wiedergegeben, wenn für die kritische Filmdicke das 2,09fache der Oberflächenrauhigkeit einer Kugel eingesetzt wird.Bei nichtlinearem (degressivem) Verlauf der log–p-Kurven treten dagegen erhebliche Differenzen auf. Um das Viskositäts-Druckverhalten besser zu berücksichtigen, wird eine Formel aufgestellt, die anstelle von und a die effektive Viskosität W bei 2/3 des Hertzschen Maximalwertes enthält. W wird dabei aus gemessenen – p-Isothermen über eine Formel vonRodermund berechnet.
Summary To prove separately the influence of the EHD-parameters, a ,u, F andT on the critical load of a point contact, a VKA tester for use inside a high pressure chamber has been constructed. The hydraulic press, which produces the load, is installed within the autoclave. The uniaxial force and the friction torque is measured inside, too. The drive produced by a 5 KW motor is introduced by a self-sealing shaft bushing.If the pressure behaviour log–p of the oil is a straight line, the load at which the hydrodynamic lubrication breaks down is represented correctly as a function of a andu by an equation ofArchard andKirk. Thereby the critical film thickness is supposed as 2.09 times greater than the surface roughness.Considerable deviations are found for log – p pressure curves with decreasing incline. To take into account this type of behaviour of the oil a new formula is proposed using the effective viscosity W at 2/3 of the Hertzian pressureP max instead of and a W is calculated from the measured – p isotherms by an equation ofRodermund.


Mit 6 Abbildungen  相似文献   

12.
By utilizing available experimental data for net energy transfer spectra for homogeneous turbulence, contributions P(, ) to the energy transfer at a wavenumber from various other wavenumbers are calculated. This is done by fitting a truncated power-exponential series in and to the experimental data for the net energy transfer T(), and using known properties of P(, ). Although the contributions P(, ) obtained by using this procedure are not unique, the results obtained by using various assumptions do not differ significantly. It seems clear from the results that for a region where the energy entering a wavenumber band dominates that leaving, much of the energy entering the band comes from wavenumbers which are about an order of magnitude smaller. That is, the energy transfer is rather nonlocal. This result is not significantly dependent on Reynolds number (for turbulence Reynolds numbers based on microscale from 3 to 800). For lower wavenumbers, where more energy leaves than enters a wavenumber band, the energy transfer into the band is more local, but much of the energy then leaves at distant wavenumbers.  相似文献   

13.
Illinois coal was ground and wet-sieved to prepare three powder stocks whose particle-size distributions were characterized. Three suspending fluids were used (glycerin, bromonaphthalene, Aroclor), with viscosities s that differed by a factor of 100 and with very different chemistries, but whose densities matched that of the coal. Suspensions were prepared under vacuum, with coal volume fractions that ranged up to 0.46. Viscosities were measured in a cone-and-plate over a shear rate range 10–3–102 s–1. Reduced viscosity r = /s is correlated in the high-shear limit ( ) with/ M, where M is the maximum packing fraction for the high-shear microstructure, to reveal the roles of size distribution and suspending fluid character. A new model that invokes the stress-dependence of M is found to correlate r well under non-Newtonian conditions with simultaneous prediction of yield stress at sufficiently high; a critical result is that stress and not governs the microstructure and rheology. Numerous experimental anomalies provide insight into suspension behavior.  相似文献   

14.
Nonstationary vibration of a flexible rotating shaft with nonlinear spring characteristics during acceleration through a critical speed of a summed-and-differential harmonic oscillation was investigated. In numerical simulations, we investigated the influence of the angular acceleration , the initial angular position of the unbalance n and the initial rotating speed on the maximum amplitude. We also performed experiments with various angular accelerations. The following results were obtained: (1) the maximum amplitude depends not only on but also on n and : (2) when the initial angular position n changes. the maximum amplitude varies between two values. The upper and lower bounds of the maximum amplitude do not change monotonously for the angular acceleration: (3) In order to always pass the critical speed with finite amplitude during acceleration. the value of must exceed a certain critical value.Nomenclature O-xyz rectangular coordinate system - , 1, 1 inclination angle of rotor and its projections to thexy- andyz-planes - I r polar moment of inertia of rotor - I diametral moment of inertia of rotor - i r ratio ofI r toI - dynamic unbalance of rotor - directional angle of fromx-axis - c damping coefficient - spring constant of shaft - N nt ,N nt nonlinear terms in restoring forees in 1 and 1 directions - 4 representative angle - a small quantity - V. V u .V N potential energy and its components corresponding to linear and nonlinear terms in the restoring forees - directional angle - n coefficients of asymmetrical nonlinear terms - n coefficients of symmetrical nonlinear terms - coefficients of asymmetrical nonlinear terms experessed in polar coordinates - coefficients of symmetrical nonlinear terms expressed in polar coordinates - rotating speed of shaft - t time - n initial angular position of att=0 - p natural frequency - p 1.p t natural frequencies of forward and backward precessions - , 1, 1 total phases of harmonic, forward precession and backward precession components in summed-and-differential harmonic oscillation - , 1, 1 phases of harmonic, forward precession and backward precession components in summed-and-differential harmonic oscillation - P, R t ,R b amplitudes of harmonic, forward precession and backward precession components in summed-and-differential harmonic oscillation - difference between phases ( = fu) - acceleration of rotor - initial rotating speed - t t ,r b amplitudes of nonstationary oscillation during acceleration - (r t )max, (r b )max maximum amplitudes of nonstationary oscillation during acceleration - (r 1 1 )max, (r b 1 )max maximum value of angular acceleration of non-passable case - 0 critical value over which the rotor can always pass the critical speed - p 1,p 2,p 3,p 4 natural frequencies of experimental apparatus  相似文献   

15.
Equations are derived for the gasdynamics of a dense plasma confined by a multiple-mirror magnetic field. The limiting cases of large and small mean free paths have been analyzed earlier: 0 and k, where is the length of an individual mirror machine, 0 is the size of the mirror, and k is the mirror ratio. The present work is devoted to a study of the intermediate range of mean free paths 0 k. It is shown that in this region of the parameters the process of expansion of the plasma has a diffusional nature, and the coefficients of transfer of the plasma along the magnetic field are calculated.Translated from Zhurnal Prikladnoi Mekhaniki i Tekhnicheskoi Fiziki, No. 6, pp. 14–19, November–December, 1974.The authors thank D. D. Ryutov for the statement of the problem and interest in the work.  相似文献   

16.
Homoclinic Saddle-Node Bifurcations in Singularly Perturbed Systems   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In this paper we study the creation of homoclinic orbits by saddle-node bifurcations. Inspired on similar phenomena appearing in the analysis of so-called localized structures in modulation or amplitude equations, we consider a family of nearly integrable, singularly perturbed three dimensional vector fields with two bifurcation parameters a and b. The O() perturbation destroys a manifold consisting of a family of integrable homoclinic orbits: it breaks open into two manifolds, W s() and W u(), the stable and unstable manifolds of a slow manifold . Homoclinic orbits to correspond to intersections W s()W u(); W s()W u()= for a<a*, a pair of 1-pulse homoclinic orbits emerges as first intersection of W s() and W u() as a>a*. The bifurcation at a=a* is followed by a sequence of nearby, O( 2(log)2) close, homoclinic saddle-node bifurcations at which pairs of N-pulse homoclinic orbits are created (these orbits make N circuits through the fast field). The second parameter b distinguishes between two significantly different cases: in the cooperating (respectively counteracting) case the averaged effect of the fast field is in the same (respectively opposite) direction as the slow flow on . The structure of W s()W u() becomes highly complicated in the counteracting case: we show the existence of many new types of sometimes exponentially close homoclinic saddle-node bifurcations. The analysis in this paper is mainly of a geometrical nature.  相似文献   

17.
Base-pressure fluctuations behind a long cylinder (l/d 5–10) and the disk (l/ d 0.0) is investigated experimentally in this paper. The spectral and correlation characteristics of the base-pressure fluctuations behind axisymmetric bodies at a Mach number M 1.0 are generalized on the basis of the data obtained and the results of other authors.Translated from Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR, Mekhanika Zhidkosti i Gaza, No. 1, pp. 181–183, January–February, 1977.  相似文献   

18.
A new slit-die rheometer (the Stressmeter) for on-line and sample measurement of the viscosity, , and the first normal stress difference, N 1, in steady shear flow for molten polymers and other high-viscosity liquids is described. Two liquid-filled transverse slots, located in one die wall near the center station, give pressures P 2 and P 3 from whose difference the wall shear stress is calculated. In the other die wall at a location opposite the center of the P 2 slot is a flush-mounted transducer, giving a pressure P 1. N 1 is calculated from the hole pressure P * = P 1P 2. A metering pump, used to measure the flow rate Q, is supplied with melt either from an extruder (online mode) or from a pressurized sample cylinder (sample mode). The wall shear rate is calculated from Q and ; the Weissenberg-Rabinowitsch correction and a new small-viscous-heating-correction algorithm (affecting ) are used. Viscous heating corrections are small; entrance and exit errors are negligible. The instrument is tested by comparing its results with those obtained from cone-plate and capillary rheometers. Measurement ranges extend to = 200 kPa, = 3000 s–1, and temperature = 250°C.Dedicated to Prof. Dr. J. Meissner on the occasion of his retirement from the chair of Polymer Physics at the Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule (ETH) Zürich, Switzerland  相似文献   

19.
Existence theorem for a minimum problem with free discontinuity set   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
We study the variational problem Where is an open set in n ,n2gL q () L (), 1q<+, O<, <+ andH n–1 is the (n–1)-dimensional Hausdorff Measure.  相似文献   

20.
The molecular theory of Doi has been used as a framework to characterize the rheological behavior of polymeric liquid crystals at the low deformation rates for which it was derived, and an appropriate extension for high deformation rates is presented. The essential physics behind the Doi formulation has, however, been retained in its entirety. The resulting four-parameter equation enables prediction of the shearing behavior at low and high deformation rates, of the stress in extensional flows, of the isotropic-anisotropic phase transition and of the molecular orientation. Extensional data over nearly three decades of elongation rate (10–2–101) and shearing data over six decades of shear rate (10–2–104) have been correlated using this analysis. Experimental data are presented for both homogeneous and inhomogeneous shearing stress fields. For the latter, a 20-fold range of capillary tube diameters has been employed and no effects of system geometry or the inhomogeneity of the flow-field are observed. Such an independence of the rheological properties from these effects does not occur for low molecular weight liquid crystals and this is, perhaps, the first time this has been reported for polymeric lyotropic liquid crystals; the physical basis for this major difference is discussed briefly. A Semi-empirical constant in eq. (18), N/m2 - c rod concentration, rods/m3 - c * critical rod concentration at which the isotropic phase becomes unstable, rods/m3 - C interaction potential in the Doi theory defined in eq. (3) - d rod diameter, m - D semi-empirical constant in eq. (19), s–1 - D r lumped rotational diffusivity defined in eq. (4), s–1 - rotational diffusivity of rods in a concentrated (liquid crystalline) system, s–1 - D ro rotational diffusivity of a dilute solution of rods, s–1 - f distribution function defining rod orientation - F tensorial term in the Doi theory defined in eq. (7) (or eq. (19)), s–1 - G tensorial term in the Doi theory defined in eq. (8) - K B Boltzmann constant, 1.38 × 10–23 J/K-molecule - L rod length, m - S scalar order parameter - S tensor order parameter defined in eq. (5) - t time, s - T absolute temperature, K - u unit vector describing the orientation of an individual rod - rate of change ofu due to macroscopic flow, s–1 - v fluid velocity vector, m/s - v velocity gradient tensor defined in eq. (9), s–1 - V mean field (aligning) potential defined in eq. (2) - x coordinate direction, m - Kronecker delta (= 0 if = 1 if = ) - r ratio of viscosity of suspension to that of the solvent at the same shear stress - s solvent viscosity, Pa · s - * viscosity at the critical concentrationc *, Pa · s - v 1, v2 numerical factors in eqs. (3) and (4), respectively - deviatoric stress tensor, N/m2 - volume fraction of rods - 0 constant in eq. (16) - * volume fraction of rods at the critical concentrationc * - average over the distribution functionf(u, t) (= d 2u f(u, t)) - gradient operator - d 2u integral over the surface of the sphere (|u| = 1)  相似文献   

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