Publication | Closed Access
Use of trajectory analysis to study stability of colloidal dispersions in flow fields
207
Citations
20
References
1977
Year
Colloidal MaterialEngineeringFluid MechanicsMechanical EngineeringMicrorheologySoft MatterTrajectory AnalysisAbstract TrajectoriesRheologySimple Laminar ShearingBiophysicsElectrostatic RepulsionParticle-laden FlowPhysicsColloidal PropertyDisperse FlowMultiphase FlowColloidal SystemCivil EngineeringHydrodynamicsColloidal DispersionsFluid-solid InteractionFlow Fields
Abstract Trajectories have been computed for two equal sized spherical particles in simple laminar shearing and in uniaxial extensional flows. Effects of interparticle attraction, electrostatic repulsion, and hydrodynamics were included. The results are pertinent to questions of colloidal stability under various conditions of flow. Particulate dispersions can react in several different ways as the intensity of shearing is increased from zero: the dispersion can remain stable; it can be redispersed, if it had been initially flocculated into a weak secondary minimum in the interparticle potential curve; it can be flocculated into a strong primary minimum in the potential curve; or, in extreme cases, it can be redispersed from the primary minimum. Results are presented which illustrate criteria for flocculation or stability to both laminar shearing and extensional flow. It is shown that hydrodynamic effects can significantly alter the criteria developed for stability of dispersions to Brownian coagulation.
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