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1.
The optical evolution of the band texture occurring in acetoxypropylcellulose thermotropic polymer has been investigated as a function of temperature and primary shear rate. Two distinct kinds of band texture were observed which are referred to here as the `fast' and `slow' band textures with regard to their rate of evolution. The fast band texture appears very quickly following the cessation of shear and then disappears. The slow band texture is much finer than the fast band texture and appears to exist both during and after the appearance of the fast band texture. The evolution behaviour of the fast band texture is interpreted in terms of the shifting of a three-region evolution curve. Particular attention has been paid to investigating the influence of temperature on the formation of the fast band texture. Rheo-optical experiments show that the minimum shear rate required to form the fast band texture increases as a power-law function of the temperature. By subsequently performing steady flow measurements over a range of temperatures, the minimum shear stress required to form the fast band texture has been found to be independent of temperature and to increase linearly with the molecular weight of the sample. Results obtained from dynamic tests are compared with similar tests conducted previously on a lyotropic hydroxypropylcellulose water solution (Harrison and Navard 1999). The results of the comparison provide evidence in support of a connection between the behaviour of the dynamic functions and the optical evolution of the slow band texture. These results suggest that nematic and cholesteric fluids can relax through several different possible mechanisms, each of which results in a periodic band texture following the cessation of shear. Received: 2 March 1999/Accepted: 26 July 1999  相似文献   

2.
Rheological properties of poly(ethylene oxide)-poly(propylene oxide)-poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO-PPO-PEO) triblock copolymer solution in both linear and nonlinear regions have been investigated. PEO-PPO-PEO triblock copolymer solution shows a dramatic change in mechanical properties as temperature changes. PEO-PPO-PEO triblock copolymer undergoes a transition from sol to gel with increase of temperature. During this transition the copolymer solution passes through three different stages, namely sol, soft gel, and hard gel. In our previous research (Hyun et al. in J Non-Newtonian Fluid Mech 55:51–65, 2002), large amplitude oscillatory shear (LAOS) behavior was found to be very sensitive to the generated microstructures. In this study, we investigated the relationship between the LAOS type and the microdomain structure. Newtonian behavior is observed in sol region, while there appear two kinds of LAOS types in the soft gel region. One is type I (G′, G′′ decreasing) and the other is a combination of type I and type IV (G′, G′′ increasing followed by decreasing). Type III (G′ decreasing, G′′ increasing followed by decreasing) is observed in the hard gel region. We compared the shape of stress curves, Lissajous pattern, and Fourier transform (FT) rheology of hard gel and soft gel under LAOS, and tried to relate the complex LAOS behavior with the microstructural change. From these investigations, it was found that the LAOS behavior and the stress pattern at large strain are closely related to the microdomain structure of PEO-PPO-PEO triblock copolymer, and provide a lot of useful information on the microstructures induced by large deformation.  相似文献   

3.
The macromolecular alignment and texture orientation in sheared thermotropic copolyester were investigated using in situ wide-angle X-ray scattering (WAXS) and polarizing optical microscopy (POM). The molecular behavior was correlated with viscoelastic properties. The polymer is a random copolyester based on 60 mol% 1,4-hydroxybenzoic acid (B) and 40 mol% ethylene terephthalate (ET) units. X-ray scattering showed that the molecular chains were aligned along the flow direction. The degree of molecular orientation, , is an increasing function of the applied shear rate. However, rheo-optics showed that shear flow could not orient the polydomain texture, i.e., neither defect stretching nor elimination of defects was observed. Instead, shear compressed the microdomains and gave rise to long-range orientation correlations. Rheology showed that the nematic melt is viscoelastic, the loss modulus G″ dominates the elastic modulus G′, and the dynamic viscosity η* is shear thinning. Moreover, the steady shear viscosity, η, also behaved shear thinning, while the first normal stress difference N 1 remained positive. The empirical Cox–Merz rule did not hold, , within the shear rate range studied. The microscopic and rheological properties suggest that B–ET is a flow-aligning nematic polymer.  相似文献   

4.
Some unusual rheological features of a liquid crystalline solution of hydroxypropylcellulose (HPC) in water have been investigated. Measurements have been performed by using a variety of different apparatuses with cone and plate geometries. Particular attention has been devoted to the experimental procedures, including the use of different sealing techniques, which are necessary to avoid solvent evaporation during the very long transients. Shear fracture effects, and their dependence on the type of sealing agents have also been studied. In steady shear, the HPC solution shows some rheological features which are common to other lyotropic systems, such as a three-region viscosity curve, and a double sign change in the first normal stress difference vs shear rate curve. The structural changes which take place after cessation of shear flow have been investigated by following the evolution of the dynamic moduli as a function of the time elapsed after the shear flow is stopped. It was found that the rate of the previously applied shear strongly affects both the kinetics and the asymptotic, long time values of the dynamic properties. Possible explanations for such behavior in terms of microstructure evolution are presented and discussed.  相似文献   

5.
 Mechanical spectroscopy is used to probe the structure of lyotropic liquid crystalline polymers during flow and after the cessation of flow. The oscillatory flow is either parallel or perpendicular to the steady-state flow. The resulting moduli provide information about the time- and shear-dependent microstructure, including anisotropy. Two different concentrations of poly(benzylglutamate) (PBG) in m-cresol and a concentrated hydroxypropylcellulose (HPC) solution, also in m-cresol, are investigated. In all cases, the orthogonal superposition moduli evolve differently from the parallel ones. The former are less sensitive to the flow-induced changes in structure than the latter ones. Together with the lack of sensitivity of the superposition moduli to texture refinement during flow, this suggests a strong relation between director orientation and superposition moduli. After the cessation of flow the parallel moduli decrease for the PBG solutions, whereas the opposite is observed in the HPC solutions. A comparison with the orthogonal moduli provides a direct measure of anisotropy. At rest, the PBG solutions tend toward a higher degree of anisotropy while the HPC solutions become more isotropic. In the latter systems, all moduli are much larger, reflecting a larger contribution from the texture. Received: 8 July 1999/Accepted: 1 October 1999  相似文献   

6.
Birefringence and flow visualization are used to study molecular orientation, texture, and the cholesteric nature of a 60 wt% aqueous hydroxypropylcellulose solution at low to moderate shear rates. There is a sharp transition in behavior at a shear rate near 0.5 s–1. Below this rate, the sample shows “Region I” shear thinning, takes on a frosted appearance, has low flow-induced orientation, and exhibits faint optical diffraction characteristic of cholesteric liquid crystals. Upon flow cessation from low rates, a highly organized cholesteric phase showing bright optical diffraction is re-formed in around 5min. Above the critical shear rate, the sample exhibits much higher orientation and a striped texture which is readily apparent with or without polarized light illumination. Upon flow cessation, molecular orientation decays significantly for up to around 400 s; however, the striped textures established during shear persist. It is suggested that persistence of the cholesteric phase under shear is responsible for the occurrence of Region I shear thinning at low shear rates in this solution.  相似文献   

7.
Sodium carboxymethylcellulose (NaCMC) in solution represents a complex rheological system, since it forms aggregates and associations and hence higher-level structures and, depending on the synthesis, is only found in a molecularly dispersed form in exceptional cases. Rheo-mechanical investigations of the viscoelasticity showed that the Cox-Merz rule is not fulfilled. The aim was therefore to examine whether rheo-optics could be employed to provide more detailed conclusions about the parameters that influence the flow behavior of NaCMC than has hitherto been available with mechanical methods. The flow birefringence, Δn , rises as the degree of polymerization increases, and exhibits the same dependence on molar mass as does the viscosity: Δn M w 3.4. As the degree of polymerization increases while the shear rate remains constant, the polymer segments become more distinctly aligned in the direction of shear. Hence increasing the degree of polymerization also affects the solution structure, i.e. the interaction of the molecules with one another. The stress-optical rule only applies to a limited extent for this system. The stress-optical coefficient, C, is almost independent of the shear rate, but is strongly influenced by the concentration and attains a limiting value of 3 × 10−8 Pa−1. C was determined for a polymer in dilute solution and the curve obtained also enabled transitions in the solution structure to be recognized. Received: 1 May 1998 Accepted: 5 October 1998  相似文献   

8.
G-actin prepared from pork liver and purified to give a product of 95–98% purity was polymerized to F-actin in a rotational dynamic viscometer. The rheological properties were investigated during the course of polymerisation and after polymerisation. G andG measured at frequencies around 0.1 Hz increased strongly during the first 3 hours of the reaction and then slowly approached a constant value in the range of 10–50 mPa. The rise during polymerisation was more than two orders of magnitude. When a solution of F-actin was subjected to steady shear at a high shear rate for a short period of time and subsequently dynamic measurements were performed, then a considerably smallerG (about 70% smaller) was observed immediately after cessation of the steady shear.G then increased with time and approached its initial value.When measuring the viscosity of F-actin solutions as a function of shear rate, a strong shear thinning effect was seen which did not vanish even at shear rates as low as 0.001 s–1. Even at this low shear rates, a pronounced yield maximum was observed before reaching the steady state. Oscillatory experiments showed a remarkably weak frequency dependence ofG. The results imply that F-actin solutions are largely structured forming a weak temporary network which can be easily destroyed by application of high shear rates. It seems most likely that the destruction occurs by a reversible, shear induced depolymerisation process.  相似文献   

9.
 The rate of entropy generation, G[W/mK], is examined both theoretically and numerically for forced and mixed convection in a rectangular duct heated at the bottom. Under fully-developed flow conditions G is expressed in terms of relevant non-dimensional hydrodynamic and thermal parameters. Numerically, it is demonstrated that G is a single, effective parameter to examine both thermal and hydrodynamic fields and their variations. Received on 22 November 1999  相似文献   

10.
 Electro-rheological suspensions (ERS) are known to undergo liquid-to-solid transition under the application of an electric field. Long-range interaction between neighboring particles results in sample-spanning particulate structures which behave as soft solids. Here, we studied the rheological expression of this field-induced transition which has many similarities with chemical gelation. This similarity shows in mechanical spectroscopy on a suspension of monodisperse silica in PDMS as model ERS. Upon application of the electric field, dynamic moduli G′, G′′ grow by orders of magnitude and evolve in a pattern which is otherwise typical for gelation of network polymers (random chemical or physical gelation). At the gel point, the slow dynamics is governed by power-law relaxation behavior (frequency-independent tan δ). A low field strength is sufficient to reach the gel point and, correspondingly, the percolating particle structure at the gel point is still very fragile. It can be broken by the imposition of low stress. For inducing a finite yield stress, the field strength needs to be increased further until the long-range electrostatic interaction generates string-like particle alignments which become clearly visible under the optical microscope. The onset of fragile connectivity was defined experimentally by the tan δ method. The ERS was probed dynamically at low frequencies where the transition is most pronounced, and also in steady shear where the rate of structure formation equals the rate of internal breaking. Received: 1 May 2001 Accepted: 11 August 2001  相似文献   

11.
A slight rearrangement of the classical Cox and Merz rule suggests that the shear stress value of steady shear flow, , and complex modulus value of small amplitude oscillatory shear, G ∗ (ω) = (G′2 + G″2)1/2, are equivalent in many respects. Small changes of material structure, which express themselves most sensitively in the steady shear stress, τ, show equally pronounced in linear viscoelastic data when plotting these with G ∗  as one of the variables. An example is given to demonstrate this phenomenon: viscosity data that cover about three decades in frequency get stretched out over about nine decades in G ∗  while maintaining steep gradients in a transition region. This suggests a more effective way of exploiting the Cox–Merz rule when it is valid and exploring reasons for lack of validity when it is not. The τ −G ∗  equivalence could also further the understanding of the steady shear normal stress function as proposed by Laun.  相似文献   

12.
Nearly all the available information on the transient flow behaviour of liquid crystalline polymers has been obtained on model systems, especially on solutions of polybenzylglutamate (PBG) and hydroxypropylcellulose (HPC). The assessment of rheological models has been based almost entirely on these model systems. It is not clear how much of the available theoretical and experimental knowledge can be applied to systems of industrial relevance, which have quite different molecular structures. Here, an industrial lyotropic system, poly(p-phenylenetherephthalamide) (PpPTA) in sulphuric acid (TWARON from AKZO), is investigated. Various techniques to study transient behaviour are used, these include measurements of transient shear and normal stresses after sudden changes in shear rate, dynamic moduli and stress relaxation after cessation of flow and elastic recoil. At all shear rates studied the PpPTA solution is shear thinning, and the first normal stress difference remains positive. For the stress transients a strain scaling applies reasonably well as it did in model systems. The moduli increase with time upon cessation of flow, indicating that the molecules become less oriented in the previous flow direction. This particular behaviour is similar to that of HPC. Transients also resemble more closely those of HPC rather than those of PBG. This latter difference might be attributed to the higher flexibility of HPC and PpPTA chains as compared with PBG molecules.  相似文献   

13.
Dielectric relaxation behavior was examined for 4-4′-n-pentyl-cyanobiphenyl (5CB) and 4-4′-n-heptyl-cyanobiphenyl (7CB) under flow. In quiescent states at all temperatures examined, both 5CB and 7CB exhibited dispersions in their complex dielectric constant ε*(ω) at characteristic frequencies ω c above 106 rad s–1. This dispersion reflected orientational fluctuation of individual 5CB and 7CB molecules having large dipoles parallel to their principal axis (in the direction of CN bond). In the isotropic state at high temperatures, these molecules exhibited no detectable changes of ε*(ω) under flow at shear rates . In contrast, in the nematic state at lower temperatures the terminal relaxation intensity of ε*(ω) as well as the static dielectric constant ε′(0) decreased under flow at . This rheo-dielectric change was discussed in relation to the flow effects on the nematic texture (director distribution) and anisotropy in motion of individual molecules with respect to the director. Received: 14 April 1998 Accepted: 29 July 1998  相似文献   

14.
Orientational changes in monodomains of flow-aligning liquid crystals, 4-n-pentyl-4′-cyanobiphenyl and N-(4-methoxybenzylidene)-4-butylaniline, were studied during shear and recovery in a linear shearing device fitted to an optical microscope. Planar alignment (director in the shear plane) allows the study of twist effects and was generated by strong planar anchoring at the walls with orientations in a range of 0–90° with the shear direction. While being held back by the anchoring walls, shear caused the bulk director to rotate towards a steady-state alignment angle in the shear direction (Leslie angle θL). The transient director rotation was observed with conoscopy. It was found that increasing the initial alignment towards the vorticity direction increased the measured θL. Upon stopping the flow, the bulk director returned to its initial state. With initial alignment orientation changing from parallel to perpendicular to the flow direction, the rate of the twist-driven recovery process increases. This rate increase is not seen in the splay-driven recovery which is constant and consistently faster than twist-driven recovery at all orientations studied. Received: 10 December 1998/Accepted: 7 June 1999  相似文献   

15.
We consider the effects of 2.7-μm-diameter hydrophobic silica particles added to droplet–matrix blends of polyethylene oxide (PEO) and polyisobutylene (PIB). The particles adsorb on the surface of the PEO drops but protrude considerably into the PIB phase. Hence, it is possible for a single particle to adsorb onto two PEO drops simultaneously. Such particles are called “bridging” particles, and they the glue drops into noncoalescing clusters. Flow visualization studies show that shearing the sample promotes bridging-induced clustering of drops and that the structure of the clusters depends on the shear rate. Rheologically, the most significant consequence of bridging-induced drop clustering appears to be a plateau in G′ at low frequencies characteristic of gel-like behavior. The gel-like behavior develops fully after shearing the sample, and the kinetics of gel formation are faster with increasing shear stress or increasing drop volume fraction. The gel-like behavior suggests that the bridging-induced drop clusters form a weak network. Apart from particle bridging, optical microscopy also reveals that particles can organize into a hexagonal lattice on the drops’ surfaces, a phenomenon that has only been noted in aqueous systems previously. Finally, rheology and flow visualization both suggest that particles promote coalescence of drops. This is surprising in light of much past research that shows that particles that are preferentially wetted by the continuous phase generally hinder coalescence in droplet–matrix systems.  相似文献   

16.
In a previous work, we have shown that chitosan true physical gelation occurs in some organic and inorganic acids (Hamdine et al. 2004). Two systems presenting similar gelation mechanisms were characterized furthermore in order to investigate the sol–gel transition: the chitosan–phosphoric acid and the chitosan–oxalic acid systems. By performing rheological measurements in the framework of linear viscoelasticity, we have investigated the effect of time, temperature, and polymer concentration on the gelation evolution. For both acid-based systems, gelation occurred above a critical polymer concentration around 5% w/v (g/100 ml) of chitosan. Isothermal time sweep experiments showed that the gelation occurs in three stages: (i) incubation; (ii) rapid increase of G′; and (iii) a last stage where G′ slowly reached its equilibrium value due to slow molecular diffusion. At the gel point, G′ and G′′ scaled with ω n , with n=0.55 for both acid-based systems and a fractal dimension d f of 1.9. Cooling–heating cycles revealed that the gels showed thermoreversibility after one sequence, but became permanent during subsequent cycles.This revised version was published online in October 2005 with corrections to the author's name.  相似文献   

17.
We explore the behavior of a wormlike micellar solution under both steady and large amplitude oscillatory shear (LAOS) in a cone–plate geometry through simultaneous bulk rheometry and localized velocimetric measurements. First, particle image velocimetry is used to show that the shear-banded profiles observed in steady shear are in qualitative agreement with previous results for flow in the cone–plate geometry. Then under LAOS, we observe the onset of shear-banded flow in the fluid as it is progressively deformed into the non-linear regime—this onset closely coincides with the appearance of higher harmonics in the periodic stress signal measured by the rheometer. These harmonics are quantified using the higher-order elastic and viscous Chebyshev coefficients e n and v n , which are shown to grow as the banding behavior becomes more pronounced. The high resolution of the velocimetric imaging system enables spatiotemporal variations in the structure of the banded flow to be observed in great detail. Specifically, we observe that at large strain amplitudes (γ 0 ≥ 1), the fluid exhibits a three-banded velocity profile with a high shear rate band located in-between two lower shear rate bands adjacent to each wall. This band persists over the full cycle of the oscillation, resulting in no phase lag being observed between the appearance of the band and the driving strain amplitude. In addition to the kinematic measurements of shear banding, the methods used to prevent wall slip and edge irregularities are discussed in detail, and these methods are shown to have a measurable effect on the stability boundaries of the shear-banded flow.  相似文献   

18.
Transient rheological features of anisotropic 30 and 40 wt.% ethyl-cellulose/m-cresol solutions were investigated, taking as a reference other lyotropes like poly(γ-benzylglutamate) in m-cresol, poly(p-phenylene-terephthalamide) in sulfuric acid and hydroxypropylcellulose in water. Strain scaling oscillations before reaching steady state, with a half-period of 20 strain units for 30 wt.% and 22.5 strain units for 40 wt.% in both stress growth and transient viscosity in creep, revealed that director tumbling takes place for ethylcellulose solutions. Large strain recoveries (2–3 strain units) obtained in recoil experiments confirmed the hypothesis of a tumbling regime. In contrast to the majority of reported lyotropes, we did not observe a master curve of strain recovery versus the product of preshear rate by time. This result appears to be associated with the existence of another mechanism of relaxation, in addition to unwinding of the defect texture created by tumbling. Dynamic viscoelastic results after cessation of flow suggest that a slower mechanism of relaxation, associated with texture or polydomain coarsening, takes place. Received: 28 July 1998 Accepted: 10 December 1998  相似文献   

19.
The rheological behavior and morphology of carbon nanofiber/polystyrene (CNF/PS) composites in their melt phase have been characterized both through experimental measurements and modeling. Composites prepared in the two different processes of solvent casting and melt blending are contrasted; melt-blended and solvent-cast composites were each prepared with CNF loadings of 2, 5, and 10 wt%. A morphological study revealed that the melt blending process results in composites with shorter CNFs than in the solvent-cast composites, due to damage caused by the higher stresses the CNFs encounter in melt blending, and that both processes retain the diameter of the as-received CNFs. The addition of carbon nanofiber to the polystyrene through either melt blending or solvent casting increases the linear viscoelastic moduli, G′ and G″, and steady-state viscosity, η, in the melt phase monotonically with CNF concentration, more so in solvent cast composites with their longer CNFs. The melt phase of solvent-cast composites with higher CNF concentrations exhibit a plateau of the elastic modulus, G′, at low frequencies, an apparent yield stress, and large first normal stress difference, N 1, at low strain rates, which can be attributed to contact-based network nanostructure formed by the long CNFs. A nanostructurally-based model for CNF/PS composites in their melt phase is presented which considers the composite system as rigid rods in a viscoelastic fluid matrix. Except for two coupling parameters, all material constants in the model for the composite systems are deduced from morphological and shear flow measurements of its separate nanofiber and polymer melt constituents of the composite. These two coupling parameters are polymer–fiber interaction parameter, σ, and interfiber interaction parameter, C I. Through comparison with our experimental measurements of the composite systems, we deduce that σ is effectively 1 (corresponding to no polymer–fiber interaction) for all CNF/PS nanocomposites studied. The dependence of CNF orientation on strain rate which we observe in our experiments is captured in the model by considering the interfiber interaction parameter, C I, as a function of strain rate. Applied to shear flows, the model predicts the melt-phase, steady-state viscosities, and normal stress differences of the CNF/PS composites as functions of shear rate, polymer matrix properties, fiber length, and mass concentration consistent with our experimental measurements.  相似文献   

20.
This research investigates the influence of monomer composition on the thermal transitions, mi crostructure, and viscoelastic properties of thermotro pic liquid crystalline polymers (LCPs) based on 1, 4-hydroxy-benzoic acid (B) and 2,6-hydroxy-naphthoic acid (N). Compositions B–N of 1:1, 1:3, 3:1, and 2:1 mol% were studied. The solid-to-nematic transition T s→n was greatly influenced by the monomer composition, ranging from 230 to 280 °C. However, the decomposition temperature T dec was independent of composition, all the materials degrading at T dec = 509 °C. Polarized optical microscopy showed a threaded texture in the nematic phase. Fiber X-ray diffraction showed aperiodic meridional maxima for all LCPs, the number of maxima depended on composition. B–N 3:1 and 1:3 mol% favor the orthorhombic crystallographic phase whereas the 1:1 and 2:1 mol% crystallized in a pseudohexagonal phase. Dynamic time sweeps showed that the nematic phases are stable at the temperatures studied. Strain sweeps showed the existence of a linear viscoelastic (LVE) regime. The LVE properties ranged from predominantly viscous (G < G) for the 1:1 mol% composition to predominantly elastic (G > G) and with a well-defined rubber-like regime for the 1:3 mol% composition, resembling the rheology of flexible polymer melts. The persistence length q appears to be the parameter driving the rheological behavior.
Angel Romo-UribeEmail:
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