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Journal ArticleDOI

The vane‐in‐cup as a novel rheometer geometry for shear thinning and thixotropic materials

H. A. Barnes, +1 more
- 01 Aug 1990 - 
- Vol. 34, Iss: 6, pp 841-866
TLDR
In this article, the suitability of the vane-in-cup geometry as a rheometer geometry was addressed and a numerical simulation of this geometry was conducted for a power-law fluid and the results compared with a similar study for a conventional bob-incup geometry.
Abstract
We have addressed the question of the suitability of the vane‐in‐cup as a rheometer geometry. A numerical simulation of this geometry was conducted for a power‐law fluid and the results compared with a similar study for a conventional bob‐in‐cup geometry. The comparison indicates that for a sufficiently shear‐thinning fluid (of shear‐thinning index less than 0.5) the fluid within the periphery of the vane blades is essentially trapped there and turns with the vane as a solid body. Calculation of the shear stress at the cup wall indicates that this quantity is equal in both geometries for a given rotational rate of the spindle. Thus the torque required to turn the spindle would be the same and identical flow curves would be predicted. This prediction was tested on two fluids thought to possess a yield stress: a 5.5% sodium carboxymethylcellulose (CMC) solution and a 4.2% Veegum PRO clay suspension. Equivalent flow curves were obtained at very low stresses/shear rates but a sudden, catastrophic viscosity loss was found for both fluids with the bob at shear rates which were still quite low. Such a loss was observed with the vane as well, but at much higher shear rates. It is suggested that this phenomenon is a form of apparent slip due to the formation of a thixotropic layer at the bob/vane surface. The much flatter stress profile obtained in the vane geometry is reasoned to postpone the formation of this layer. Rheological data obtained with the vane appear to be a faithful representation of these materials and show the absence of a true yield stress.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The yield stress—a review or ‘παντα ρει’—everything flows?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors give an account of the development of the idea of yield stress for solids, soft solids and structured liquids from the beginning of this century to the present time.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of the slip (wall depletion) of polymer solutions, emulsions and particle suspensions in viscometers: its cause, character, and cure

TL;DR: Slip occurs in the flow of two-phase systems because of the displacement of the disperse phase away from solid boundaries as mentioned in this paper, which arises from steric, hydrodynamic, viscoelastic and chemical forces and constraints acting on the dispersed phase immediately adjacent to the walls.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rotating vane rheometry — a review

TL;DR: The use of rotating vane geometries for the measurement of the flow properties of very non-Newtonian liquids has become increasingly popular over the last 20 years as mentioned in this paper, and the particular advantages of the vane geometry are its simplicity of fabrication, ease of cleaning and more than anything else, its elimination of serious wall-slip effects.
BookDOI

Rheology of fresh cement and concrete

TL;DR: In this article, the rheology of fresh cement, mortar, concrete and related products is described in the context of practical situations, and deals with testing and measurement, together with the main features of their behaviour.
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Chemorheology of thermosets—an overview

TL;DR: A review of chemorheological techniques and measurement systems for thermoset resins is presented in this article, with particular emphasis on the Chemorheology techniques and measuring systems.
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