Issue 3, 2016

Shear thickening regimes of dense non-Brownian suspensions

Abstract

We propose a unifying rheological framework for dense suspensions of non-Brownian spheres, predicting the onsets of particle friction and particle inertia as distinct shear thickening mechanisms, while capturing quasistatic and soft particle rheology at high volume fractions and shear rates respectively. Discrete element method simulations that take suitable account of hydrodynamic and particle-contact interactions corroborate the model predictions, demonstrating both mechanisms of shear thickening, and showing that they can occur concurrently with carefully selected particle surface properties under certain flow conditions. Microstructural transitions associated with frictional shear thickening are presented. We find very distinctive divergences of both microstructural and dynamic variables with respect to volume fraction in the thickened and non-thickened states.

Graphical abstract: Shear thickening regimes of dense non-Brownian suspensions

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
15 Sep 2015
Accepted
05 Nov 2015
First published
06 Nov 2015
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Soft Matter, 2016,12, 914-924

Author version available

Shear thickening regimes of dense non-Brownian suspensions

C. Ness and J. Sun, Soft Matter, 2016, 12, 914 DOI: 10.1039/C5SM02326B

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