Ordered domains in sheared dense suspensions: The link to viscosity and the disruptive effect of friction

Author:

Goyal Abhay12,Del Gado Emanuela2ORCID,Jones Scott Z.1,Martys Nicos S.1

Affiliation:

1. Infrastructure Materials Group, Engineering Laboratory, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD, 20899

2. Department of Physics, Institute of Soft Matter Synthesis and Metrology, Georgetown University, Washington, DC, 20057

Abstract

Monodisperse suspensions of Brownian colloidal spheres crystallize at high densities, and ordering under shear has been observed at densities below the crystallization threshold. We perform large-scale simulations of a model suspension containing over [Formula: see text] particles to quantitatively study the ordering under shear and to investigate its link to the rheological properties of the suspension. We find that at high rates, for [Formula: see text], the shear flow induces an ordering transition that significantly decreases the measured viscosity. This ordering is analyzed in terms of the development of layering and planar order, and we determine that particles are packed into hexagonal crystal layers (with numerous defects) that slide past each other. By computing local [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] order parameters, we determine that the defects correspond to chains of particles in a squarelike lattice. We compute the individual particle contributions to the stress tensor and discover that the largest contributors to the shear stress are primarily located in these lower density, defect regions. The defect structure enables the formation of compressed chains of particles to resist the shear, but these chains are transient and short-lived. The inclusion of a contact friction force allows the stress-bearing structures to grow into a system-spanning network, thereby disrupting the order and drastically increasing the suspension viscosity.

Funder

NIST PREP Gaithersberg Program

National Science Foundation

Georgetown University

Publisher

Society of Rheology

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics,General Materials Science

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