Flow-to-fracture transition and pattern formation in a discontinuous shear thickening fluid

Recent theoretical and experimental work suggests a frictionless-frictional transition with increasing inter-particle pressure explains the extreme solid-like response of discontinuous shear thickening suspensions. However, analysis of macroscopic discontinuous shear thickening flow in geometries ot...

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Veröffentlicht in:Communications physics 2020-07, Vol.3 (1), Article 119
Hauptverfasser: Ozturk, Deren, Morgan, Miles L., Sandnes, Bjørnar
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Recent theoretical and experimental work suggests a frictionless-frictional transition with increasing inter-particle pressure explains the extreme solid-like response of discontinuous shear thickening suspensions. However, analysis of macroscopic discontinuous shear thickening flow in geometries other than the standard rheometry tools remain scarce. Here we use a Hele-Shaw cell geometry to visualise gas-driven invasion patterns in discontinuous shear thickening cornstarch suspensions. We plot quantitative results from pattern analysis in a volume fraction-pressure phase diagram and explain them in context of rheological measurements. We observe three distinct pattern morphologies: viscous fingering, dendritic fracturing, and system-wide fracturing, which correspond to the same packing fraction ranges as weak shear thickening, discontinuous shear thickening, and shear-jammed regimes. The microscopic mechanisms underlying the discontinuous shear thickening transition in dense granular systems are still under debate. Here, the authors explore this transition by characterizing the shape of invasion patterns in Hele-Shaw cell experiments with confined cornstarch suspensions.
ISSN:2399-3650
2399-3650
DOI:10.1038/s42005-020-0382-7