Rheology Tanner
Rheology Tanner
Rheology Tanner
г II
Fig. 1.7. Shear stress (t) vs. shearing rate (•/) for (a) Bingham b o d y ; t y is the yield stress and the
tangent of the slope ß gives the incremental viscosity. |b) Pseudo-plastic or shear-thinning
fluid, (c) D i l a t a n t or shear-thickening fluid. Dashed lines show N e w t o n i a n behaviour.
y = 0; |t|<Ty,
where rj p , the plastic viscosity, is the slope of the (low curve. F o r у < 0, the
curves in Fig. 1.7 are to be c o n t i n u e d as odd functions of y.
T h e concept of an idealized Bingham plastic is convenient in practice
because some fluids a p p r o x i m a t e this type of behaviour m o r e or less
closely. C o m m o n examples are slurries, drilling m u d s , greases, oil paints,
t o o t h p a s t e , and sludges. T h e explanation of Bingham plastic behaviour is
t h a t the fluid at rest contains a three-dimensional structure of sufficient
rigidity to resist any stress less t h a n the yield stress, т . If this stress is
exceeded the s t r u c t u r e disintegrates a n d the system behaves as a N e w t o n i a n
fluid under a shear stress т — t y ; when the shear stress falls below r y the
structure is reformed.
z = k\yГ1*, * (1.6)
' In m a n y older b o o k s this ratio is often termed the ' a p p a r e n t viscosity'. We shall not use
this term.
I-
14 INTRODUCTION TO RHEOLOGY
#
a n d since n < 1 for pseudo-plastics t h e viscosity f u n c t i o n decreases as the
rate of s h e a r increases. This type of b e h a v i o u r is characteristic of high poly-
mers, p o l y m e r solutions a n d m a n y suspensions. O n e physical i n t e r p r e t a t i o n ^ Ь,
o r t h i f p h e n o m e n o n is t h a t with increasing rates of shear the molecules ( o r ' J
the structure) are progressively aligned. Instead of the r a n d o m intermingled^
state which exists w h e n the fluid is at rest the m a j o r axes are b r o u g h t into
line with the direction of flow a n d t h e viscosity decreases. This is, however,
an over-simplified picture (see C h a p t e r 5). UMJ? л И 1 Ì J "v^uAuU^û
T h e H e r s c h e l - B u l k l e y e q u a t i o n c o m b i n e s t h e B i n g h a m a n d power-law
bodies. O t h e r empirical e q u a t i o n s w h i c h have been used to describe
pseudo-plastic b e h a v i o u r are the following with the n a m e s of their inven-
tors :
Prandtl г = A s i n - 1 {y/C)
C a s s o n (Solid)
T h e r e a r e m a n y o t h e r s (Wilkinson 1960).
In these e q u a t i o n s , А, В a n d C, t]0, m a n d n a r e c o n s t a n t s which
are typical of a p a r t i c u l a r fluid. An especially useful f o r m h a s been
described by C a r r e a u (see Bird et al. 1977, p. 210-211). H e sets (rj — =
I
1.3. N O N - N E W T O N I A N FLUID BEHAVIOUR IN S H E A R 15
does not hold for a dilute suspension of spheres when the microscale Rey-
nolds n u m b e r is not negligible. In most cases we shall merely use the a b o v e
ideas to check constitutive relations p r o d u c e d by o t h e r m e t h o d s ; it is gener-
ally necessary to have s o m e m i c r o s t r u c t u r a l k n o w l e d g e to apply this prin-
ciple with confidence. i / i
x
k û n S T i ' ù u i 4- I - r
2.7. The classical constitutive relation^^ * * ~
№
^.-.-considerations. By definition, n o shear stresses occur in a fluid at rest, a n d
t h e pressure acts equally in all directions. T h e r e f o r e the constitutive m o d e l
for a n y fluid at rest is simply
T is then the extra stress (or deviatoric stress) a n d is the p a r t of the stress
tensor which c a n be c o m p u t e d f r o m the constitutive e q u a t i o n when the
m o t i o n is k n o w n . S u b s t i t u t i o n of (2.57) into the e q u a t i o n s of m o t i o n gives
the N a v i e r - S t o k e s e q u a t i o n s . T h u s we get three e q u a t i o n s plus the incom-
pressibility c o n d i t i o n to find the three velocity c o m p o n e n t s a n d the press-
ure. All of the a b o v e constitutive f o r m s can be seen to satisfy all of the
I
56 REVIEW OF CONTINUUM MECHANICS
Fig. 2.6. Simple shearing kinematics; x , is the flow direction, x 2 is the velocity gradient direc-
tion, and x 3 is the neutral direction. The speed Oj = yx2 ; the other velocity c o m p o n e n t s v2 and
v3 are zero.
general principles for constitutive laws laid d o w n in § 2.6; the relation (2.57)
is isotropic because it has been m a d e so; the Appendix to this chapter gives
a derivation merely assuming linearity; we expect isotropic behaviour from
fluids with a r a n d o m isotropic miscrostructure. Before leaving these fluids
we shall examine their complete reiponses in simple shearing flow and in
elongational flow. In the former we shall consider the velocity field v = i y y
(Fig. 2.6), where i is a unit vector parallel to the x-axis, a n d consider only
the incompressible case. T h e n the p r o p o s e d velocity field satisfies the
incompressibility condition (2.45) and f r o m (2.57) we find
W e now check that (2.59) and the assumed velocity field satisfy the equa-
tions of m o t i o n , under the assumption that n o variation in quantities in the
X a n d z directions occurs. Some a s s u m p t i o n a b o u t the body force must be
m a d e ; it will be ignored here for simplicity. (If required a gravity body force
can be easily a d d e d ; it simply p r o d u c e s a hydrostatic pressure distribution.)
T h e n we find p — constant, the level being set externally by some b o u n d a r y
condition a n d not influenced by the flow. W e emphasize that since the
hydrostatic pressure p is not set by the flow, only the differences of n o r m a l
stresses
N2 = &22 - (2.61)
2.7. T H E C L A S S I C A L CONSTITUTIVE RELATIONS 57
C
T ß i f e - m * frr , Л , f x is eoi 1 al io ; a n d e r ; and ' ^
i n Iwhtch the c o n s t a n t of integration С is t o b e d e t e r m i n e d by using the
ï f ô u n d a r y c o n d i t i o n s at the t w o walls. This is generally not an easy
p r o b l e m , as extensive w o r k on it h a s shown. F o r example, o n e can a t t e m p t
töaöse the p o w e r - l a w model, a n d it is i m m e d i a t e l y clear t h a t there are
sihipler a n d m o r e c o n v e n i e n t m e t h o d s of viscosity m e a s u r e m e n t .
T h e second difficulty is t h a t pressure-hole e r r o r s m u s t be considered (see
C h ä p t e r 4). F r o m the early sets of d a t a using a n n u l a r flows it a p p e a r e d t h a t
fhè : secónd n o r m a l stress difference was positive. H o w e v e r , w h e n the d a t a
were corrected for pressure-hole errors, the sign of N z was reversed, a n d
thifs<N 2 îs negative, which is n o w believed to be the case. But since the
c o r r e c t i o n s a r e larger t h a n the m e a s u r e d quantities, the process is of
d u b i o u s a c c u r a c y / T e s t s with flush-mounted (hole-free) pressure t r a n s d u c e r s
äfe 1 possible, b u t . d u e to t h e wall c u r v a t u r e , these a r e not easy experiments.
Д59? Couette flow and helical flows
The-helical flows listed in § 3.2.4 a r e all partially controllable. W e will not
give a detailed verification of this, but merely n o t e t h a t with three u n k n o w n
f u n c t i o n s , w, co, a n d p at o u r disposal, it is a l w a y s possible t o satisfy the
m o m e n t u m e q u a t i o n s . These flows,., with coaxial cylindrical slip surfaces,
c a n b e visualized a s flows between two coaxial cylinders which m a y be in
relative m o t i o n . Cases in which the m o t i o n is purely axial h a v e already
beea discussed in § 3,5.2. Cases that w o u l d require an a z i m u t h a l pressure
gradient, such as the e x a m p l e in § 3.4, can be considered. Such i n s t r u m e n t s
a f d ' n o t discussed f u r t h e r here; there are s o m e practical p r o b l e m s ( K r a y n i k
egaL-4984). :.:•:.
If t h e g a p between the inner a n d o u t e r cylinders is small in c o m p a r i s o n to
the r a d i u s of either one, by ignoring the c u r v a t u r e o n e c a n treat a helical
98 VISCOMETRIC AND ELONGATIONAL FLOWS
T h e n , i n t e g r a t i o n yields
Thrust F
'Sea'
of fluid
• ï 'Free'
edge