Exploring shear alignment of concentrated wormlike micelles using rheology coupled with small-angle neutron scattering

Author:

King Joshua P.1ORCID,Butler Calum S. G.1,Prescott Stuart W.2ORCID,Sokolova Anna V.3,de Campo Liliana3,Williams Ashley P.1,Tabor Rico F.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Chemistry, Monash University, Clayton, VIC 3800, Australia

2. School of Chemical Engineering, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia

3. Australian Centre for Neutron Scattering, ANSTO, Lucas Heights, NSW 2234, Australia

Abstract

Wormlike micelles (WLMs) are vital components of many consumer products and industrial fluids, adding a shear-dependent viscous texture through their entanglement in solutions. It is now well accepted from experiments such as coupling rheology and scattering that, similar to many polymer solutions and dispersions of highly anisotropic particles, WLM behavior during shear arises from the alignment of the “worms” with the shear field, resulting in ordering that is rapidly lost in the cessation of shear. Most studies of such systems have been limited to dilute systems that are far below concentrations used industrially and commercially, due to the complexity of analyzing shear-induced many-body effects in high volume fraction dispersions. Here, we explore the shear alignment of concentrated WLM solutions comprising sodium laureth sulfate and cocamidopropyl betaine in 0.38 M aqueous sodium chloride. By analyzing only scattering data at high values of the scattering vector (i.e., correlations at short length scales that are dominant in such concentrated systems), we explore whether useful information can be obtained by naïvely approximating the WLMs as an ensemble of unconnected short rods representing sections of the worms. By taking this reductionist approach to analyzing the obtained two-dimensional scattering patterns from these systems under shear, we find that in this regime, such concentrated worms can be approximated as cylinders that become more aligned with the direction of shear as volume fraction and shear rate increase.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Subject

Condensed Matter Physics,Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes,Mechanics of Materials,Computational Mechanics,Mechanical Engineering

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