Thermal chain model of electrorheology and magnetorheology
- 27 December 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review E
- Vol. 63 (1) , 011406
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physreve.63.011406
Abstract
Steady shear simulations of electrorheology (ER) and magnetorheology (MR) in a uniaxial field are presented. These large scale simulations are three dimensional, and include the effect of Brownian motion. In the absence of thermal fluctuations, the expected shear thinning viscosity is observed and a striped phase is seen to rapidly form in a uniaxial field, with a shear slip zone in each sheet. However, as the influence of Brownian motion increases, the fluid stress decreases, especially at lower Mason numbers, and the striped phase eventually disappears, even when the fluid stress is still high. To account for the uniaxial steady shear data we propose a microscopic chain model of the role played by thermal fluctuations on the rheology of ER and MR fluids that delineates the regimes where an applied field can impact the fluid viscosity, and gives an analytical prediction for the thermal effect.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Brownian electrorheological fluids as a model for flocculated dispersionsJournal of Rheology, 1996
- Computer simulation of structures and rheological properties of electrorheological fluidsPhysical Review E, 1996
- Chain model of electrorheologyThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1996
- A microstructural investigation of the nonlinear response of electrorheological suspensionsRheologica Acta, 1995
- Simulations of electrorheological and particle mixture suspensions: Agglomerate and layer structuresThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1993
- Brownian dynamics simulation of dipole suspensions under shear: the phase diagramMolecular Physics, 1992
- Rheology of electrorheological fluidsPhysical Review Letters, 1992
- Dynamic simulation of an electrorheological fluidThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1992
- Sheared dipolar suspensionsPhysical Review A, 1991
- Computer simulation of an electrorheological fluidJournal of Non-Newtonian Fluid Mechanics, 1990