The characterization of the total stress of concentrated suspensions of noncolloidal spheres in Newtonian fluids

Citation
Ie. Zarraga et al., The characterization of the total stress of concentrated suspensions of noncolloidal spheres in Newtonian fluids, J RHEOL, 44(2), 2000, pp. 185-220
Citations number
33
Categorie Soggetti
Physics
Journal title
JOURNAL OF RHEOLOGY
ISSN journal
01486055 → ACNP
Volume
44
Issue
2
Year of publication
2000
Pages
185 - 220
Database
ISI
SICI code
0148-6055(200003/04)44:2<185:TCOTTS>2.0.ZU;2-X
Abstract
The total stress of a concentrated suspension of noncolloidal spheres in a Newtonian fluid was characterized by independent measurements in viscometri c flows. Using a suspension balance formulation, the normal stress in the v orticity direction (Sigma(33)) for a suspension undergoing simple shear was extracted from Acrivos et al.'s [Int. J. Multiphase Flow 19, 797 (1993)] r esuspension data in a Couette device. Employing a new correlation for the r elative viscosity mu(r) which obeys the Einstein relation in the dilute lim it while diverging at random close packing, it was found that Sigma(33)/tau (where tau is the magnitude of the shear stress) was a strong function of the solid volume fraction phi, scaling as phi(3)e(2.34 phi). The relative v iscosity, measured in a parallel plate viscometer, was in good agreement wi th the proposed correlation, while the normal stress differences N-1 and N- 2 for concentrated suspensions (phi = 0.30-0.55) were characterized using p arallel plate and cone-and-plate geometries, as well as laser profilometry measurements of the suspension surface deflection in a rotating rod geometr y. The normal stresses were proportional to the shear stress tau, and with beta = N-1/tau and delta = N-2/tau, the parameter combinations resulting fr om the three experimental geometries, beta- delta, beta, and delta+1/2 beta , were all seen to increase with phi according to the derived scaling phi(3 )e(2.34 phi). Furthermore, the best-fit N-1 and N-2 values consistent with the set of experiments were both negative, with \N-2\ > \N-1\ at any given concentration and shear rate. Taken together, the results obtained allow a complete determination of the total stress of a sheared suspension and in p articular enabled us to compute the shear-induced particle-phase pressure P i, as defined in jeffrey et al. (C) 2000 The Society of Rheology. [S0148-60 55(00)00402-8].