Unsteady flow and particle migration in dense, non-Brownian suspensions

  • Hermes M
  • Guy B
  • Poon W
  • et al.
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Abstract

We present experimental results on dense corn-starch suspensions as examples of non-Brownian, nearly-hard particles that undergo continuous and discontinuous shear thickening (CST and DST) at intermediate and high densities respectively. Our results offer strong support for recent theories involving a stress-dependent effective contact friction among particles. We show however that in the DST regime, where theory might lead one to expect steady-state shear bands oriented layerwise along the vorticity axis, the real flow is unsteady. To explain this, we argue that steady-state banding is generically ruled out by the requirement that, for hard non-Brownian particles, the solvent pressure and the normal-normal component of the particle stress must balance separately across the interface between bands. (Otherwise there is an unbalanced migration flux.) However, long-lived transient shear-bands remain possible.

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Hermes, M., Guy, B. M., Poon, W. C. K., Poy, G., Cates, M. E., & Wyart, M. (2016). Unsteady flow and particle migration in dense, non-Brownian suspensions. Journal of Rheology, 60(5), 905–916. https://doi.org/10.1122/1.4953814

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