Abstract
Yielding behavior is well known in attractive colloidal suspensions. Adhesive non-Brownian suspensions, in which the interparticle bonds are due to finite-size contacts, also show yielding behavior. We use a combination of steady-state, oscillatory and shear-reversal rheology to probe the physical origins of yielding in the latter class of materials, and find that yielding is not simply a matter of breaking adhesive bonds, but involves unjamming from a shear-jammed state in which the micro-structure has adapted to the direction of the applied load. Comparison with a recent constraint-based rheology model shows the importance of friction in determining the yield stress, suggesting novel ways to tune the flow of such suspensions.
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CITATION STYLE
Richards, J. A., Guy, B. M., Blanco, E., Hermes, M., Poy, G., & Poon, W. C. K. (2020). The role of friction in the yielding of adhesive non-Brownian suspensions. Journal of Rheology, 64(2), 405–412. https://doi.org/10.1122/1.5132395
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