A New Viscometric Technique To Successfully Measure Shear Thickening Behaviour, If And When It Occurs

- Organization:
- The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 14
- File Size:
- 221 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2007
Abstract
Shear-thickening suspensions abound throughout the hydraulic conveying industry; at least this is the perception of many engineers running plants where hydraulic conveying is commonplace. In reality, shear thickening behaviour is limited, in the main, to high concentrations of fine particles, including colloidal and biological suspensions, at moderate to high shear rates. In the authors? experience most cases of shear-thickening behaviour have been either simple ?coarse? particle interactions, poor instrumentation techniques, or both. In some cases these were obviously heterogeneous flows, while in others flows that were homogenous, or were thought to be homogenous. Examples, which illustrate this erroneous perception are given. However, the trend towards pastes and complex suspensions that use high concentration carrier fluids means that the underlying slurries for many of these flows may now be truly shear-thickening. Unfortunately, suspensions that might exhibit shear thickening also invariably exhibit slip, or wall-particle depletion. These separate phenomena are difficult to resolve experimentally and many observations of apparent shear-thickening behaviour are in fact obscured or convoluted by slip effects. A method is presented whereby the true flow properties of these high concentration suspensions, and hence accurate prediction of pipeline flows, can be made using a parallel plate rheometer.
Citation
APA:
(2007) A New Viscometric Technique To Successfully Measure Shear Thickening Behaviour, If And When It OccursMLA: A New Viscometric Technique To Successfully Measure Shear Thickening Behaviour, If And When It Occurs. The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2007.