Abstract
The influence of preshearing on the rheological behaviour of model suspensions was investigated with a stress-controlled cone-and-plate rheometer. The used matrix fluids showed Newtonian behaviour over the whole range of applied shear stresses. Highly monodisperse spherical glass spheres with various particle diameters were used as fillers. By applying steady preshearing at a low preshear stress, where a diffusion of particles can be expected, it was found for all model suspensions investigated at volume fractions ranging from 0.20 to 0.35 that the time-temperature superposition in the steady shear and in the dynamic mode holds within the chosen temperature range. Furthermore, all presheared model suspensions displayed a high and a low frequency range which are either separated by a shoulder or by a plateau value of G′ at intermediate frequencies. It could clearly be demonstrated that the low frequency range strongly depends on the preshear conditions. Hence, the features observed in the low frequency range can be attributed to a structure formation of a particulate network. In the high frequency range a frequency-dependent behaviour was observed which obeys the classical behaviour of Newtonian fluids (G′∝ω2, G′′∝ω). The resulting temperature shift factors from the dynamic and the steady shear mode are identical and independent of the volume fraction and the particle size of the filler.
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Received: 29 November 2000 Accepted: 12 July 2001
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Schmidt, M., Münstedt, H. Reological behaviour of concentrated monodisperse suspensions as a function of preshear conditions and temperature: an experimental study. Rheol. Acta 41, 193–204 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1007/s003970100205
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s003970100205