Author:
Kim Bongsu,Kwon Soyoung,Lee Manhee,Kim QHwan,An Sangmin,Jhe Wonho
Abstract
Viscoelastic fluids exhibit rheological nonlinearity at a high shear rate. Although typical nonlinear effects, shear thinning and shear thickening, have been usually understood by variation of intrinsic quantities such as viscosity, one still requires a better understanding of the microscopic origins, currently under debate, especially on the shear-thickening mechanism. We present accurate measurements of shear stress in the bound hydration water layer using noncontact dynamic force microscopy. We find shear thickening occurs above ∼ 106s−1shear rate beyond 0.3-nm layer thickness, which is attributed to the nonviscous, elasticity-associated fluidic instability via fluctuation correlation. Such a nonlinear fluidic transition is observed due to the long relaxation time (∼ 10−6s) of water available in the nanoconfined hydration layer, which indicates the onset of elastic turbulence at nanoscale, elucidating the interplay between relaxation and shear motion, which also indicates the onset of elastic turbulence at nanoscale above a universal shear velocity of ∼ 1 mm/s. This extensive layer-by-layer control paves the way for fundamental studies of nonlinear nanorheology and nanoscale hydrodynamics, as well as provides novel insights on viscoelastic dynamics of interfacial water.
Funder
National Research Foundation of Korea
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Reference35 articles.
1. Bird RB Armstrong RC Hassager O (1987) Dynamics of Polymeric Liquids: Volume 1, Fluid Mechanics (Wiley-Interscience, New York)
2. Larson RG (1999) The Structure and Rheology of Complex Fluids (Oxford Univ Press, New York)
3. Nonlinear Rheology of a Nanoconfined Simple Fluid
4. Elastic turbulence in a polymer solution flow
5. Linear and Nonlinear Rheology of Living Cells
Cited by
14 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献