Shear thickening in concentrated suspensions: phenomenology, mechanisms and relations to jamming
Yale University · University of Chicago
Abstract
Shear thickening is a type of non-Newtonian behavior in which the stress required to shear a fluid increases faster than linearly with shear rate. Many concentrated suspensions of particles exhibit an especially dramatic version, known as Discontinuous Shear Thickening (DST), in which the stress suddenly jumps with increasing shear rate and produces solid-like behavior. The best known example of such counter-intuitive response to applied stresses occurs in mixtures of cornstarch in water. Over the last several years, this shear-induced solid-like behavior together with a variety of other unusual fluid phenomena has generated considerable interest in the physics of densely packed suspensions. In this review, we…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 16.44
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 150
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Dilatant
- Physics
- Shear (geology)
- Shear rate
- Jamming
- Mechanics
- Simple shear
- Phase diagram