Explanations for the cause of shear thickening in concentrated colloidal suspensions

被引:324
|
作者
Hoffman, RL [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ New Hampshire, Dept Chem Engn, Polymer Res Grp, Durham, NH 03824 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1122/1.550884
中图分类号
O3 [力学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0801 ;
摘要
In contrast to recent publications suggesting that particle cluster formation alone can play an important role in the shear thickening flow behavior of concentrated colloidal suspensions, we believe that there is little if any substantive evidence to prove it. To support this view, we use data from various studies, including data from studies concluding that layered flow is not involved. One reason for the confusion seems to center around the inability of various light-scattering and neutron-scattering techniques to show particle layering before shear thickening when the layers are not well defined. In this regard, one should understand that layered flow san occur without rigorous ordering of particles within the layers, and as the flowing suspension approaches the point of instability, the hydrodynamic forces driving for the instability will jostle the particles within the layers sufficiently to make it even harder to see the layering and any ordering, if it exists, within the layers. Having these views, we argue that the process described by Hoffman (1972, 1974) for shear thickening is still applicable with refinements. The major refinement is the idea that, after the hydrodynamic forces cause the instability which breaks up the layered flow, particle jamming probably involves cluster formation both with and without particle contact. Particle roughness and angularity will facilitate the contact. Finally, we agree with various authors who argue that the best chance of finding shear thickening in concentrated colloidal suspensions without layer formation lies in Brownian hard-sphere suspensions, but the evidence given for it so far is not definitive. (C) 1998 The Society of Rheology.
引用
收藏
页码:111 / 123
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Tunable shear thickening in suspensions
    Lin, Neil Y. C.
    Ness, Christopher
    Cates, Michael E.
    Sun, Jin
    Cohen, Itai
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2016, 113 (39) : 10774 - 10778
  • [42] Dynamics of concentrated colloidal suspensions
    Pusey, PN
    Segre, PN
    Behrend, OP
    Meeker, SP
    Poon, WCK
    PHYSICA A, 1997, 235 (1-2): : 1 - 8
  • [43] THE STRUCTURE OF CONCENTRATED COLLOIDAL SUSPENSIONS
    SNOOK, IK
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 1988, 195 : 185 - COLL
  • [44] THE SEDIMENTATION OF CONCENTRATED COLLOIDAL SUSPENSIONS
    BUSCALL, R
    COLLOIDS AND SURFACES, 1990, 43 (01): : 33 - 53
  • [45] Shear thickening in colloidal dispersions
    Ball, RC
    Melrose, JR
    SLOW DYNAMICS IN COMPLEX SYSTEMS, 1999, 469 : 49 - 52
  • [46] Shear thickening in colloidal dispersions
    Wagner, Norman J.
    Brady, John F.
    PHYSICS TODAY, 2009, 62 (10) : 27 - 32
  • [47] Shear fronts in shear-thickening suspensions
    Han, Endao
    Wyart, Matthieu
    Peters, Ivo R.
    Jaeger, Heinrich M.
    PHYSICAL REVIEW FLUIDS, 2018, 3 (07):
  • [48] Scaling of Shear Rheology of Concentrated Charged Colloidal Suspensions across Glass Transition
    Wu, Bin
    Iwashita, Takuya
    Chen, Wei-Ren
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B, 2022, 126 (04): : 922 - 927
  • [49] Stress versus strain controlled shear: Yielding and relaxation of concentrated colloidal suspensions
    Pamvouxoglou, A.
    Schofield, A. B.
    Petekidis, G.
    Egelhaaf, S. U.
    JOURNAL OF RHEOLOGY, 2021, 65 (06) : 1219 - 1233
  • [50] Generality of shear thickening in dense suspensions
    Brown E.
    Forman N.A.
    Orellana C.S.
    Zhang H.
    Maynor B.W.
    Betts D.E.
    Desimone J.M.
    Jaeger H.M.
    Nature Materials, 2010, 9 (3) : 220 - 224