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Anomalous crystalline ordering of particles in a viscoelastic fluid under high shear

ORAL

Abstract



Addition of particles to a viscoelastic suspension dramatically alters the properties of the mixture, particularly when it is sheared or otherwise processed. Shear-induced stretching of the polymers results in elastic stress that causes a substantial increase in measured viscosity with increasing shear, and an attractive interaction between particles, leading to their chaining. At even higher shear rates, the flow becomes unstable, even in the absence of particles. This instability makes it very difficult to determine the properties of a particle suspension. Here we use a fully immersed parallel plate geometry to measure the high-shear-rate behavior of a suspension of particles in a viscoelastic fluid. We find an unexpected separation of the particles within the suspension resulting in the formation of a layer of particles in the center of the cell. Remarkably, monodisperse particles form a crystalline layer which dramatically alters the shear instability. By combining measurements of the velocity field and torque fluctuations, we show that this solid layer disrupts the flow instability and introduces a new, single-frequency component to the torque fluctuations that reflects a dominant velocity pattern in the flow. These results highlight the interplay between particles and a suspending viscoelastic fluid at very high shear rates.

Presenters

  • Sijie Sun

    harvard university

Authors

  • Sijie Sun

    harvard university

  • Nan Xue

    ETH Zürich, Cornell University

  • Stefano Aime

    Harvard University

  • Hyoungsoo Kim

    KAIST, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST)

  • Jizhou Tang

    Harvard University

  • Gareth H McKinley

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Howard A Stone

    Princeton University

  • David A Weitz

    Harvard University