Capillary flow of dense colloidal suspensions
dc.contributor.advisor
Poon, Wilson
en
dc.contributor.advisor
Pusey, Peter
en
dc.contributor.author
Isa, Lucio
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dc.date.accessioned
2008-12-02T14:15:52Z
dc.date.available
2008-12-02T14:15:52Z
dc.date.issued
2008
dc.description.abstract
The purpose of this thesis is to study the
flow of dense colloidal suspensions into micronsized
capillaries at the particle level. Understanding the flow of complex fluids in
terms of their constituents (colloids, polymers, or surfactants) poses deep fundamental
challenges, and has wide applications in many industrial processes. Through the
use of a novel experimental procedure we find results contrasting with the predicted
bulk rheological behaviour of dense colloidal systems and propose an alternative
approach based on the analogy with granular systems. Quantitative predictions which
successfully explain the data are obtained.
In order to obtain quantitative information on the dynamics of the system, we
image the
flow using a fast confocal microscope and identify the trajectories of each
particle. Due to the nature of the
flow, conventional techniques for locating and
tracking the particles fail to yield satisfactory results. To overcome this limitation,
we have developed a novel technique which allows us to successfully track the particles
in strongly non-uniform flow fields (published, 2006).
We focus our attention on three main aspects of the flow: concentration gradients,
velocity profiles and time behaviour.
We initially discuss the occurrence of concentration gradients along the flow
direction and relate them to the local flow profiles. We observe high density regions
where the velocity is uniform across the channel (complete plugs) and lower density
regions where shear is present. The observed concentration profiles can be qualitatively
explained by considering the relative
ow between the solvent and the suspended
particles.
The
flow profiles in the presence of shear consist of a plug in the centre while
shear occurs localized adjacent to the channel walls, reminiscent of yield-stress fluid
behaviour. However, the observed scaling of the velocity profiles with the
flow rate
strongly contrasts yield-stress fluid predictions. Instead, the velocity profiles can be
captured by a theory of stress
fluctuations originally developed for chute flow of dry
granular media (published ,2007). We extend the model to our case and discuss it as a
function of a series of parameters (boundary conditions, volume fraction, channel size,
etc.) highlighting differences and similarities with granular media.
Finally we discuss the time behaviour of complete plug flows relating it to the
microscopic dynamics of the particles. At variance with dilute systems, dense systems
exhibit velocity
fluctuations when driven into channels by a constant pressure difference.
We find that there exists a threshold value of the
flow rate below which oscillations in
the velocity are absent and above which their frequency scales as a power law of the
flow
rate. Despite quantitative predictions on this issue that are still missing, we present
a microscopic description of the phenomenon highlighting the interplay between the
particles and the solvent.
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dc.format.extent
8262003 bytes
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dc.format.mimetype
application/pdf
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/2600
dc.language.iso
en
dc.subject
Physics
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dc.title
Capillary flow of dense colloidal suspensions
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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