Migration and Morphology of Colloidal Gel Clusters in Cylindrical Channel Flow.

Langmuir

Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695, United States.

Published: August 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • * As we observed the flow, we found that the size of clusters formed by these nanoemulsions varied based on the balance between shear forces and attractive interactions, with larger clusters accumulating towards the center of the channel.
  • * Our findings revealed a significant transition in the gel structure from sparse clusters near the channel walls to larger, concentrated clusters at the center, which also affected flow behavior and deviated from expected models, especially under strong attractions and low shear stress conditions.

Article Abstract

We report the cluster-level structural parameters of colloidal thermogelling nanoemulsions in channel flow as a function of attractive interactions and local shear stress. The spatiotemporal evolution of the gel microstructure is obtained by directly visualizing the dispersed phase near the edge of a cylindrical channel. We observe the flow of the nanoemulsion gels in a range of radial positions () and shear stresses between 70 and 220 Pa, finding that the -dependent cluster sizes are due to a balance between shear forces that yield bonds and attractive interactions that rebuild the inter-colloid bonds. In addition, the largest clusters appear to be affected by confinement and accumulate toward the central axis of the channel, resulting in a volume fraction gradient. Cluster size and volume fraction variabilities are most prominent when the attractive interactions are the strongest. Specifically, a distinct transition from sparse, fluidized clusters near the walls to concentrated, large clusters toward the center is observed. These two structural states coincide with a velocity-based transition from higher shear rates near the walls to lower shear rates toward the center of the channel. We find a compounding effect where larger gel clusters, formed under strong attractions and low shear stresses, are susceptible to shear-induced migration that intensifies -dependent heterogeneity and deviations in the flow behavior from predictive models.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.1c01287DOI Listing

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