Publication | Closed Access
An objective model for slow orientation kinetics in concentrated fiber suspensions: Theory and rheological evidence
272
Citations
31
References
2008
Year
EngineeringMechanical EngineeringSoft MatterMechanics ModelingRheological MeasurementMechanicsRheologyBiophysicsObjective ModelConcentrated Fiber SuspensionsConcentrated SuspensionsRheology ControlMaterial MechanicsPolymer MeltRheological Constitutive EquationOrientation TensorFiber StructureRheological PropertySlow Orientation KineticsMechanics Of Materials
Recent experiments suggest that short fibers in concentrated suspensions align more slowly as a function of strain than models based on Jeffery’s equation predict. We develop an objective model that captures the slow orientation kinetics exhibited by short-fiber suspensions. The standard moment-tensor equation of fiber orientation is used to find equations for the change rates of the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of the orientation tensor. As a phenomenological assumption, the growth rates of the eigenvalues are reduced by a constant scalar factor, while the rotation rate expressions for the eigenvectors are unchanged. The eigenvalue/eigenvector equations are then reassembled as a tensor equation. An equivalent kinetic theory is also developed. The new model is tested in a variety of flows, and found to exhibit slower kinetics than the standard model but similar steady-state orientations. The model provides an excellent fit to the shear stress transient in a shear reversal experiment with a 30% glass fiber filled polybutylene terephthalate resin melt, and we show how this experiment can be used to determine the parameters of the model.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1