2017 Annual Meeting
(535b) Probing the Structure of High Viscosity Complex Fluids at High Shear Rates
Authors
The work presented here will cover recent efforts to improve µRheoSANS, by incorporating a new syringe pump and more robust cell design that increases the maximum pressure the system can tolerate from 3 bar to 350 bar. The new device will enable investigations of a broad class of viscoelastic fluids, including paints, fracturing fluids, polishing slurries, lubricants, microemulsions, liquid crystals, and polymer melts. The new system will also be able to investigate effects of hydrostatic pressure head and temperatures (eventually up to 200°C) on the flow behavior of complex fluids. We will validate the new design by measuring a mildly viscoelastic wormlike micelle solution and comparing to previous experiments completed using the prototype device and Couette RheoSANS. Then, we will investigate a model rigid-rod dispersion, an aqueous suspension of cellulosic nanocrystals, using neutrons to directly probe the fluid structure and correlate structural transitions such as alignment, log-rolling, or wagging with the non-linear rheological behavior of the system.