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Rheometer

A rheometer is a laboratory device used to measure the way in which a viscous fluid (a liquid, suspension or slurry) flows in response to applied forces. It is used for those fluids which cannot be defined by a single value of viscosity and therefore require more parameters to be set and measured than is the case for a viscometer. It measures the rheology of the fluid.

A rotational rheometer in use in a research laboratory

There are two distinctively different types of rheometers. Rheometers that control the applied shear stress or shear strain are called rotational or shear rheometers, whereas rheometers that apply extensional stress or extensional strain are extensional rheometers. Rotational or shear type rheometers are usually designed as either a native strain-controlled instrument (control and apply a user-defined shear strain which can then measure the resulting shear stress) or a native stress-controlled instrument (control and apply a user-defined shear stress and measure the resulting shear strain).

Meanings and origin edit

The word rheometer comes from the Greek, and means a device for measuring main flow.[1] In the 19th century it was commonly used for devices to measure electric current, until the word was supplanted by galvanometer and ammeter. It was also used for the measurement of the flow of liquids, in medical practice (flow of blood) and in civil engineering (flow of water). This latter use persisted to the second half of the 20th century in some areas. Following the coining of the term rheology the word came to be applied to instruments for measuring the character rather than quantity of flow, and the other meanings are obsolete. (Principal Source: Oxford English Dictionary) The principle and working of rheometers is described in several texts.[2][3]

Types of shear rheometer edit

Shearing geometries edit

 
Different shearing planes that can be employed to measure rheological properties. From the left - Couette drag plate flow; cylindrical flow; Poiseuille flow in a tube and plate-plate flow.

Four basic shearing planes can be defined according to their geometry,

  • Couette drag plate flow
  • Cylindrical flow
  • Poiseuille flow in a tube and
  • Plate-plate flow

The various types of shear rheometers then use one or a combination of these geometries.

Linear shear edit

One example of a linear shear rheometer is the Goodyear linear skin rheometer, which is used to test cosmetic cream formulations, and for medical research purposes to quantify the elastic properties of tissue. The device works by attaching a linear probe to the surface of the tissue under test, a controlled cyclical force is applied, and the resultant shear force measured using a load cell. Displacement is measured using an LVDT. Thus the basic stress–strain parameters are captured and analysed to derive the dynamic spring rate of the tissue under tests.

Pipe or capillary edit

Liquid is forced through a tube of constant cross-section and precisely known dimensions under conditions of laminar flow. Either the flow-rate or the pressure drop are fixed and the other measured. Knowing the dimensions, the flow-rate can be converted into a value for the shear rate and the pressure drop into a value for the shear stress. Varying the pressure or flow allows a flow curve to be determined. When a relatively small amount of fluid is available for rheometric characterization, a microfluidic rheometer with embedded pressure sensors can be used to measure pressure drop for a controlled flow rate.[4][5]

Capillary rheometers are especially advantageous for characterization of therapeutic protein solutions since it determines the ability to be syringed.[6] Additionally, there is an inverse relationship between the rheometry and solution stability, as well as thermodynamic interactions.

 
Rotational geometries of different types of shearing rheometers

Dynamic shear rheometer edit

A dynamic shear rheometer, commonly known as DSR is used for research and development as well as for quality control in the manufacturing of a wide range of materials. Dynamic shear rheometers have been used since 1993 when Superpave was used for characterising and understanding high temperature rheological properties of asphalt binders in both the molten and solid state and is fundamental in order to formulate the chemistry and predict the end-use performance of these materials.

Rotational cylinder edit

The liquid is placed within the annulus of one cylinder inside another. One of the cylinders is rotated at a set speed. This determines the shear rate inside the annulus. The liquid tends to drag the other cylinder round, and the force it exerts on that cylinder (torque) is measured, which can be converted to a shear stress. One version of this is the Fann V-G Viscometer, which runs at two speeds, (300 and 600 rpm) and therefore only gives two points on the flow curve. This is sufficient to define a Bingham plastic model which was once widely used in the oil industry for determining the flow character of drilling fluids. In recent years rheometers that spin at 600, 300, 200, 100, 6 & 3 RPM have become more commonplace. This allows for more complex fluids models such as Herschel–Bulkley to be used. Some models allow the speed to be continuously increased and decreased in a programmed fashion, which allows the measurement of time-dependent properties.

Cone and plate edit

The liquid is placed on horizontal plate and a shallow cone placed into it. The angle between the surface of the cone and the plate is around 1–2 degrees but can vary depending on the types of tests being run. Typically the plate is rotated and the torque on the cone measured. A well-known version of this instrument is the Weissenberg rheogoniometer, in which the movement of the cone is resisted by a thin piece of metal which twists—known as a torsion bar. The known response of the torsion bar and the degree of twist give the shear stress, while the rotational speed and cone dimensions give the shear rate. In principle the Weissenberg rheogoniometer is an absolute method of measurement providing it is accurately set up. Other instruments operating on this principle may be easier to use but require calibration with a known fluid. Cone and plate rheometers can also be operated in an oscillating mode to measure elastic properties, or in combined rotational and oscillating modes.

Basic concepts of shear rheometer[7] edit

 
Strain-controlled rheometer: separate motor-transducer system. (Co = controller; M = torque; φ = deflection angle; n = rotational speed)

In the past, devices with controlled strain or strain rate (CR rheometers) were distinguished from rheometers with controlled stress (CS rheometers) depending on the measuring principle.

In a controlled strain (CR) rheometer, the sample is subjected to displacement or speed (strain or strain rate) using a DC motor, and the resulting torque (stress) is measured separately using an additional force-torque sensor (torque compensation transducer). The electric current used to generate the displacement or speed of the motor is not used as a measure of the torque acting in the sample. This mode of operation is also referred to as separate motor transducer mode (SMT).

  • Deflection angle/strain and shear rate are set by the motor based on the position control of the  optical encoder in the lower part.
  • Sample reaction  (the stress acting within the sample) is measured by an additional force-torque transducer (torque re-balance transducer)
  • The separation of drive and torque measurement has advantages in strain-controlled tests, since the motor's moment of inertia has no influence on the measured torque.
  • Limitations of the SMT mode can be found in  stress-controlled measurements (e.g. creep tests)
 
Stress-controlled rheometer: Combined motor-transducer system. (M = torque; φ = deflection angle; n = rotational speed)

In a controlled-stress (CS) rheometer, the torque acting in the sample is determined directly  from the electrical torque generated in the motor. With such a design, no separate torque sensor is required. Usually, this mode of operation is described as combined motor-transducer mode (CMT).

  • The stress acting in the sample is determined directly from the torque generated in the motor, which is required  to deform the sample.
  • Deflection angle/strain and shear rate are determined by the use of an optical encoder.
  • Single-motor rheometers allow  characterization of samples in either strain/shear rate or shear stress-controlled tests
  • Since only one actor (motor) is required, the single-motor rheometer can be easily combined with additional application-specific accessories that enable the study of material properties in a variety  of different applications.
  • Limitations may occur from less precise data evaluation in the transient regime of start-up shear tests.

Nowadays, there are device concepts that allow both working modes, the combined motor transducer mode and the separate motor transducer mode, by using two motors in one device. The use of only one motor enables measurements to be made in the combined motor transducer mode. Using both motors allows working in the separate motor transducer mode, where one motor is used to deform the sample while the other motor is used to record the torque acting in the sample. Furthermore, this concept allows for additional modes of operation, such as counter-rotating mode, where both motors can rotate or oscillate in opposite directions. This mode of operation is used, for example, to increase the maximum achievable shear rate range or for advanced rheooptical characterization of samples.

Types of extensional rheometer edit

The development of extensional rheometers has proceeded more slowly than shear rheometers, due to the challenges associated with generating a homogeneous extensional flow. Firstly, interactions of the test fluid or melt with solid interfaces will result in a component of shear flow, which will compromise the results. Secondly, the strain history of all the material elements must be controlled and known. Thirdly, the strain rates and strain levels must be high enough to stretch the polymeric chains beyond their normal radius of gyration, requiring instrumentation with a large range of deformation rates and a large travel distance.[8][9]

Commercially available extensional rheometers have been segregated according to their applicability to viscosity ranges. Materials with a viscosity range from approximately 0.01 to 1 Pa.s. (most polymer solutions) are best characterized with capillary breakup rheometers, opposed jet devices, or contraction flow systems. Materials with a viscosity range from approximately 1 to 1000 Pa.s. are used in filament stretching rheometers. Materials with a high viscosity >1000 Pa.s., such as polymer melts, are best characterized by constant-length devices.[10]

Extensional rheometry is commonly performed on materials that are subjected to a tensile deformation. This type of deformation can occur during processing, such as injection molding, fiber spinning, extrusion, blow-molding, and coating flows. It can also occur during use, such as decohesion of adhesives, pumping of hand soaps, and handling of liquid food products.

A list of currently and previously marketed commercially available extensional rheometers is shown in the table below.

Commercially available extensional rheometers edit

Instrument name Viscosity Range [Pa.s] Flow Type Manufacturer
Currently marketed Rheotens >100 Fiber spinning Goettfert
CaBER 0.01-10 Capillary breakup Thermo Scientific
Sentmanat extensional rheometer >10000 Constant length Xpansion Instruments
FiSER 1–1000 Filament stretching Cambridge Polymer Group
VADER >100 Controlled Filament stretching Rheo Filament
Previously marketed RFX 0.01-1 Opposed Jet Rheometric Scientific
RME >10000 Constant length Rheometric Scientific
MXR2 >10000 Constant length Magna Projects

Rheotens edit

Rheotens is a fiber spinning rheometer, suitable for polymeric melts. The material is pumped from an upstream tube, and a set of wheels elongates the strand. A force transducer mounted on one of the wheels measures the resultant extensional force. Because of the pre-shear induced as the fluid is transported through the upstream tube, a true extensional viscosity is difficult to obtain. However, the Rheotens is useful to compare the extensional flow properties of a homologous set of materials.

CaBER edit

The CaBER is a capillary breakup rheometer. A small quantity of material is placed between plates, which are rapidly stretched to a fixed level of strain. The midpoint diameter is monitored as a function of time as the fluid filament necks and breaks up under the combined forces of surface tension, gravity, and viscoelasticity. The extensional viscosity can be extracted from the data as a function of strain and strain rate. This system is useful for low viscosity fluids, inks, paints, adhesives, and biological fluids.

FiSER edit

The FiSER (filament stretching extensional rheometer) is based on the works by Sridhar et al. and Anna et al.[11] In this instrument, a set of linear motors drive a fluid filament apart at an exponentially increasing velocity while measuring force and diameter as a function of time and position. By deforming at an exponentially increasing rate, a constant strain rate can be achieved in the samples (barring endplate flow limitations). This system can monitor the strain-dependent extensional viscosity, as well as stress decay following flow cessation. A detailed presentation on the various uses of filament stretching rheometry can be found on the MIT web site.[12]

Sentmanat edit

The Sentmanat extensional rheometer (SER) is actually a fixture that can be field installed on shear rheometers. A film of polymer is wound on two rotating drums, which apply constant or variable strain rate extensional deformation on the polymer film. The stress is determined from the torque exerted by the drums.

Other types of extensional rheometers edit

Acoustic rheometer edit

Acoustic rheometers employ a piezo-electric crystal that can easily launch a successive wave of extensions and contractions into the fluid. This non-contact method applies an oscillating extensional stress. Acoustic rheometers measure the sound speed and attenuation of ultrasound for a set of frequencies in the megahertz range. Sound speed is a measure of system elasticity. It can be converted into fluid compressibility. Attenuation is a measure of viscous properties. It can be converted into viscous longitudinal modulus. In the case of a Newtonian liquid, attenuation yields information on the volume viscosity. This type of rheometer works at much higher frequencies than others. It is suitable for studying effects with much shorter relaxation times than any other rheometer.

Falling plate edit

A simpler version of the filament stretching rheometer, the falling plate rheometer sandwiches liquid between two solid surfaces. The top plate is fixed, and bottom plate falls under the influence of gravity, drawing out a string of the liquid.

Capillary/contraction flow edit

Other systems involve liquid going through an orifice, expanding from a capillary, or sucked up from a surface into a column by a vacuum. A pressurized capillary rheometer can be used to design thermal treatments of fluid food. This instrumentation could help prevent over and under-processing of fluid food because extrapolation to high temperatures would not be necessary.[13]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Mezger, Thomas (2014). Applied Rheology (6th ed.). Austria: Anton Paar. p. 192. ISBN 9783950401608.
  2. ^ Macosko, Christopher W. (1994). Rheology: Principles, Measurements, and Applications. Wiley-VCH. ISBN 0-471-18575-2.
  3. ^ Ferry, JD (1980). Viscoelastic Properties of Polymers. Wiley. ISBN 0-471-04894-1.
  4. ^ Pipe, CJ; Majmudar, TS; McKinley, GH (2008). "High Shear-Rate Viscometry". Rheologica Acta. 47 (5–6): 621–642. doi:10.1007/s00397-008-0268-1. S2CID 16953617.
  5. ^ Chevalier, J; Ayela, F. (2008). "Microfluidic on chip viscometers". Rev. Sci. Instrum. 79 (7): 076102. Bibcode:2008RScI...79g6102C. doi:10.1063/1.2940219. PMID 18681739.
  6. ^ Hudson, Steven (10 October 2014). "A Microliter Capillary Rheometer for the Characterization of Protein Solutions". Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences. 104 (2): 678–685. doi:10.1002/jps.24201. PMID 25308758.
  7. ^ Mezger, Thomas G. (2020). The Rheology Handbook (5th Revised ed.). Hanover: Vincentz Network GmbH & Co. KG, Hanover. pp. 400–403. ISBN 978-3-86630-532-8.
  8. ^ Macosko, Christopher W. (1994). Rheology : principles, measurements, and applications. New York: VCH. ISBN 1-56081-579-5.
  9. ^ Barnes, Howard A. (2000). A handbook of elementary rheology. Aberystwyth: Univ. of Wales, Institute of Non-Newtonian Fluid Mechanics. ISBN 0-9538032-0-1.
  10. ^ Springer Handbook of Experimental Fluid Mechanics, Tropea, Foss, Yarin (eds), Chapter 9.1(2007)
  11. ^ Sridhar, J. Non-Newtonian Fluid Mech., vol 40, 271–280 (1991); Anna, J. Non-Newtonian Fluid Mech., vol 87, 307–335 (1999)
  12. ^ McKinley, G. "A decade of filament stretching rheometry". web.mit.edu.
  13. ^ Ros-Polski, Valquíria (5 March 2014). "Rheological Analysis of Sucrose Solution at High Temperatures Using a Microwave-HeatedPressurized Capillary Rheometer". Food Science. 79 (4): E540–E545. doi:10.1111/1750-3841.12398. PMID 24597707.
  • K. Walters (1975) Rheometry (Chapman & Hall) ISBN 0-412-12090-9
  • A.S.Dukhin and P.J.Goetz "Ultrasound for characterizing colloids", Elsevier, (2002)

External links edit

  • See Dynamic Shear Rheometer by Cooper Research Technology
  • Presentation on alternative uses of rheometers 15 September 2019 at the Wayback Machine

rheometer, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, february, 2015, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Rheometer news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message A rheometer is a laboratory device used to measure the way in which a viscous fluid a liquid suspension or slurry flows in response to applied forces It is used for those fluids which cannot be defined by a single value of viscosity and therefore require more parameters to be set and measured than is the case for a viscometer It measures the rheology of the fluid A rotational rheometer in use in a research laboratoryThere are two distinctively different types of rheometers Rheometers that control the applied shear stress or shear strain are called rotational or shear rheometers whereas rheometers that apply extensional stress or extensional strain are extensional rheometers Rotational or shear type rheometers are usually designed as either a native strain controlled instrument control and apply a user defined shear strain which can then measure the resulting shear stress or a native stress controlled instrument control and apply a user defined shear stress and measure the resulting shear strain Contents 1 Meanings and origin 2 Types of shear rheometer 2 1 Shearing geometries 2 2 Linear shear 2 3 Pipe or capillary 2 4 Dynamic shear rheometer 2 5 Rotational cylinder 2 6 Cone and plate 3 Basic concepts of shear rheometer 7 4 Types of extensional rheometer 4 1 Commercially available extensional rheometers 4 1 1 Rheotens 4 1 2 CaBER 4 1 3 FiSER 4 1 4 Sentmanat 4 2 Other types of extensional rheometers 4 2 1 Acoustic rheometer 4 2 2 Falling plate 4 2 3 Capillary contraction flow 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksMeanings and origin editThe word rheometer comes from the Greek and means a device for measuring main flow 1 In the 19th century it was commonly used for devices to measure electric current until the word was supplanted by galvanometer and ammeter It was also used for the measurement of the flow of liquids in medical practice flow of blood and in civil engineering flow of water This latter use persisted to the second half of the 20th century in some areas Following the coining of the term rheology the word came to be applied to instruments for measuring the character rather than quantity of flow and the other meanings are obsolete Principal Source Oxford English Dictionary The principle and working of rheometers is described in several texts 2 3 Types of shear rheometer editShearing geometries edit nbsp Different shearing planes that can be employed to measure rheological properties From the left Couette drag plate flow cylindrical flow Poiseuille flow in a tube and plate plate flow Four basic shearing planes can be defined according to their geometry Couette drag plate flow Cylindrical flow Poiseuille flow in a tube and Plate plate flowThe various types of shear rheometers then use one or a combination of these geometries Linear shear edit One example of a linear shear rheometer is the Goodyear linear skin rheometer which is used to test cosmetic cream formulations and for medical research purposes to quantify the elastic properties of tissue The device works by attaching a linear probe to the surface of the tissue under test a controlled cyclical force is applied and the resultant shear force measured using a load cell Displacement is measured using an LVDT Thus the basic stress strain parameters are captured and analysed to derive the dynamic spring rate of the tissue under tests Pipe or capillary edit Liquid is forced through a tube of constant cross section and precisely known dimensions under conditions of laminar flow Either the flow rate or the pressure drop are fixed and the other measured Knowing the dimensions the flow rate can be converted into a value for the shear rate and the pressure drop into a value for the shear stress Varying the pressure or flow allows a flow curve to be determined When a relatively small amount of fluid is available for rheometric characterization a microfluidic rheometer with embedded pressure sensors can be used to measure pressure drop for a controlled flow rate 4 5 Capillary rheometers are especially advantageous for characterization of therapeutic protein solutions since it determines the ability to be syringed 6 Additionally there is an inverse relationship between the rheometry and solution stability as well as thermodynamic interactions nbsp Rotational geometries of different types of shearing rheometersDynamic shear rheometer edit A dynamic shear rheometer commonly known as DSR is used for research and development as well as for quality control in the manufacturing of a wide range of materials Dynamic shear rheometers have been used since 1993 when Superpave was used for characterising and understanding high temperature rheological properties of asphalt binders in both the molten and solid state and is fundamental in order to formulate the chemistry and predict the end use performance of these materials Rotational cylinder edit The liquid is placed within the annulus of one cylinder inside another One of the cylinders is rotated at a set speed This determines the shear rate inside the annulus The liquid tends to drag the other cylinder round and the force it exerts on that cylinder torque is measured which can be converted to a shear stress One version of this is the Fann V G Viscometer which runs at two speeds 300 and 600 rpm and therefore only gives two points on the flow curve This is sufficient to define a Bingham plastic model which was once widely used in the oil industry for determining the flow character of drilling fluids In recent years rheometers that spin at 600 300 200 100 6 amp 3 RPM have become more commonplace This allows for more complex fluids models such as Herschel Bulkley to be used Some models allow the speed to be continuously increased and decreased in a programmed fashion which allows the measurement of time dependent properties Cone and plate edit The liquid is placed on horizontal plate and a shallow cone placed into it The angle between the surface of the cone and the plate is around 1 2 degrees but can vary depending on the types of tests being run Typically the plate is rotated and the torque on the cone measured A well known version of this instrument is the Weissenberg rheogoniometer in which the movement of the cone is resisted by a thin piece of metal which twists known as a torsion bar The known response of the torsion bar and the degree of twist give the shear stress while the rotational speed and cone dimensions give the shear rate In principle the Weissenberg rheogoniometer is an absolute method of measurement providing it is accurately set up Other instruments operating on this principle may be easier to use but require calibration with a known fluid Cone and plate rheometers can also be operated in an oscillating mode to measure elastic properties or in combined rotational and oscillating modes Basic concepts of shear rheometer 7 edit nbsp Strain controlled rheometer separate motor transducer system Co controller M torque f deflection angle n rotational speed In the past devices with controlled strain or strain rate CR rheometers were distinguished from rheometers with controlled stress CS rheometers depending on the measuring principle In a controlled strain CR rheometer the sample is subjected to displacement or speed strain or strain rate using a DC motor and the resulting torque stress is measured separately using an additional force torque sensor torque compensation transducer The electric current used to generate the displacement or speed of the motor is not used as a measure of the torque acting in the sample This mode of operation is also referred to as separate motor transducer mode SMT Deflection angle strain and shear rate are set by the motor based on the position control of the optical encoder in the lower part Sample reaction the stress acting within the sample is measured by an additional force torque transducer torque re balance transducer The separation of drive and torque measurement has advantages in strain controlled tests since the motor s moment of inertia has no influence on the measured torque Limitations of the SMT mode can be found in stress controlled measurements e g creep tests nbsp Stress controlled rheometer Combined motor transducer system M torque f deflection angle n rotational speed In a controlled stress CS rheometer the torque acting in the sample is determined directly from the electrical torque generated in the motor With such a design no separate torque sensor is required Usually this mode of operation is described as combined motor transducer mode CMT The stress acting in the sample is determined directly from the torque generated in the motor which is required to deform the sample Deflection angle strain and shear rate are determined by the use of an optical encoder Single motor rheometers allow characterization of samples in either strain shear rate or shear stress controlled tests Since only one actor motor is required the single motor rheometer can be easily combined with additional application specific accessories that enable the study of material properties in a variety of different applications Limitations may occur from less precise data evaluation in the transient regime of start up shear tests Nowadays there are device concepts that allow both working modes the combined motor transducer mode and the separate motor transducer mode by using two motors in one device The use of only one motor enables measurements to be made in the combined motor transducer mode Using both motors allows working in the separate motor transducer mode where one motor is used to deform the sample while the other motor is used to record the torque acting in the sample Furthermore this concept allows for additional modes of operation such as counter rotating mode where both motors can rotate or oscillate in opposite directions This mode of operation is used for example to increase the maximum achievable shear rate range or for advanced rheooptical characterization of samples Types of extensional rheometer editThe development of extensional rheometers has proceeded more slowly than shear rheometers due to the challenges associated with generating a homogeneous extensional flow Firstly interactions of the test fluid or melt with solid interfaces will result in a component of shear flow which will compromise the results Secondly the strain history of all the material elements must be controlled and known Thirdly the strain rates and strain levels must be high enough to stretch the polymeric chains beyond their normal radius of gyration requiring instrumentation with a large range of deformation rates and a large travel distance 8 9 Commercially available extensional rheometers have been segregated according to their applicability to viscosity ranges Materials with a viscosity range from approximately 0 01 to 1 Pa s most polymer solutions are best characterized with capillary breakup rheometers opposed jet devices or contraction flow systems Materials with a viscosity range from approximately 1 to 1000 Pa s are used in filament stretching rheometers Materials with a high viscosity gt 1000 Pa s such as polymer melts are best characterized by constant length devices 10 Extensional rheometry is commonly performed on materials that are subjected to a tensile deformation This type of deformation can occur during processing such as injection molding fiber spinning extrusion blow molding and coating flows It can also occur during use such as decohesion of adhesives pumping of hand soaps and handling of liquid food products A list of currently and previously marketed commercially available extensional rheometers is shown in the table below Commercially available extensional rheometers edit Instrument name Viscosity Range Pa s Flow Type ManufacturerCurrently marketed Rheotens gt 100 Fiber spinning GoettfertCaBER 0 01 10 Capillary breakup Thermo ScientificSentmanat extensional rheometer gt 10000 Constant length Xpansion InstrumentsFiSER 1 1000 Filament stretching Cambridge Polymer GroupVADER gt 100 Controlled Filament stretching Rheo FilamentPreviously marketed RFX 0 01 1 Opposed Jet Rheometric ScientificRME gt 10000 Constant length Rheometric ScientificMXR2 gt 10000 Constant length Magna ProjectsRheotens edit Rheotens is a fiber spinning rheometer suitable for polymeric melts The material is pumped from an upstream tube and a set of wheels elongates the strand A force transducer mounted on one of the wheels measures the resultant extensional force Because of the pre shear induced as the fluid is transported through the upstream tube a true extensional viscosity is difficult to obtain However the Rheotens is useful to compare the extensional flow properties of a homologous set of materials CaBER edit The CaBER is a capillary breakup rheometer A small quantity of material is placed between plates which are rapidly stretched to a fixed level of strain The midpoint diameter is monitored as a function of time as the fluid filament necks and breaks up under the combined forces of surface tension gravity and viscoelasticity The extensional viscosity can be extracted from the data as a function of strain and strain rate This system is useful for low viscosity fluids inks paints adhesives and biological fluids FiSER edit The FiSER filament stretching extensional rheometer is based on the works by Sridhar et al and Anna et al 11 In this instrument a set of linear motors drive a fluid filament apart at an exponentially increasing velocity while measuring force and diameter as a function of time and position By deforming at an exponentially increasing rate a constant strain rate can be achieved in the samples barring endplate flow limitations This system can monitor the strain dependent extensional viscosity as well as stress decay following flow cessation A detailed presentation on the various uses of filament stretching rheometry can be found on the MIT web site 12 Sentmanat edit The Sentmanat extensional rheometer SER is actually a fixture that can be field installed on shear rheometers A film of polymer is wound on two rotating drums which apply constant or variable strain rate extensional deformation on the polymer film The stress is determined from the torque exerted by the drums Other types of extensional rheometers edit Acoustic rheometer edit Acoustic rheometers employ a piezo electric crystal that can easily launch a successive wave of extensions and contractions into the fluid This non contact method applies an oscillating extensional stress Acoustic rheometers measure the sound speed and attenuation of ultrasound for a set of frequencies in the megahertz range Sound speed is a measure of system elasticity It can be converted into fluid compressibility Attenuation is a measure of viscous properties It can be converted into viscous longitudinal modulus In the case of a Newtonian liquid attenuation yields information on the volume viscosity This type of rheometer works at much higher frequencies than others It is suitable for studying effects with much shorter relaxation times than any other rheometer Falling plate edit A simpler version of the filament stretching rheometer the falling plate rheometer sandwiches liquid between two solid surfaces The top plate is fixed and bottom plate falls under the influence of gravity drawing out a string of the liquid Capillary contraction flow edit Other systems involve liquid going through an orifice expanding from a capillary or sucked up from a surface into a column by a vacuum A pressurized capillary rheometer can be used to design thermal treatments of fluid food This instrumentation could help prevent over and under processing of fluid food because extrapolation to high temperatures would not be necessary 13 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rheometers Acoustic rheometer Dynamic shear rheometer Food rheology Piezometer RheometryReferences edit Mezger Thomas 2014 Applied Rheology 6th ed Austria Anton Paar p 192 ISBN 9783950401608 Macosko Christopher W 1994 Rheology Principles Measurements and Applications Wiley VCH ISBN 0 471 18575 2 Ferry JD 1980 Viscoelastic Properties of Polymers Wiley ISBN 0 471 04894 1 Pipe CJ Majmudar TS McKinley GH 2008 High Shear Rate Viscometry Rheologica Acta 47 5 6 621 642 doi 10 1007 s00397 008 0268 1 S2CID 16953617 Chevalier J Ayela F 2008 Microfluidic on chip viscometers Rev Sci Instrum 79 7 076102 Bibcode 2008RScI 79g6102C doi 10 1063 1 2940219 PMID 18681739 Hudson Steven 10 October 2014 A Microliter Capillary Rheometer for the Characterization of Protein Solutions Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences 104 2 678 685 doi 10 1002 jps 24201 PMID 25308758 Mezger Thomas G 2020 The Rheology Handbook 5th Revised ed Hanover Vincentz Network GmbH amp Co KG Hanover pp 400 403 ISBN 978 3 86630 532 8 Macosko Christopher W 1994 Rheology principles measurements and applications New York VCH ISBN 1 56081 579 5 Barnes Howard A 2000 A handbook of elementary rheology Aberystwyth Univ of Wales Institute of Non Newtonian Fluid Mechanics ISBN 0 9538032 0 1 Springer Handbook of Experimental Fluid Mechanics Tropea Foss Yarin eds Chapter 9 1 2007 Sridhar J Non Newtonian Fluid Mech vol 40 271 280 1991 Anna J Non Newtonian Fluid Mech vol 87 307 335 1999 McKinley G A decade of filament stretching rheometry web mit edu Ros Polski Valquiria 5 March 2014 Rheological Analysis of Sucrose Solution at High Temperatures Using a Microwave HeatedPressurized Capillary Rheometer Food Science 79 4 E540 E545 doi 10 1111 1750 3841 12398 PMID 24597707 K Walters 1975 Rheometry Chapman amp Hall ISBN 0 412 12090 9 A S Dukhin and P J Goetz Ultrasound for characterizing colloids Elsevier 2002 External links editSee Dynamic Shear Rheometer by Cooper Research Technology Presentation on alternative uses of rheometers Archived 15 September 2019 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rheometer amp oldid 1182616750, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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