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We propose a new view on yield stress materials. Dense suspensions and many other materials have a yield stress-they flow only if a large enough shear stress is exerted on them. There has been an ongoing debate in the literature on whether true yield stress fluids exist, and even whether the concept is useful. This is mainly due to the experimental difficulties in determining the yield stress. We show that most if not all of these difficulties disappear when a clear distinction is made between two types of yield stress fluids: thixotropic and simple ones. For the former, adequate experimental protocols need to be employed that take into account the time evolution of these materials: ageing and shear rejuvenation. This solves the problem of experimental determination of the yield stress. Also, we show that true yield stress materials indeed exist, and in addition, we account for shear banding that is generically observed in yield stress fluids.
Origin of apparent viscosity in yield stress fluids below yieldingMøller, P.C.F.; Fall, A.; Bonn, D. General rightsIt is not permitted to download or to forward/distribute the text or part of it without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), other than for strictly personal, individual use, unless the work is under an open content license (like Creative Commons). Disclaimer/Complaints regulationsIf you believe that digital publication of certain material infringes any of your rights or (privacy) interests, please let the Library know, stating your reasons. In case of a legitimate complaint, the Library will make the material inaccessible and/or remove it from the website. Please Ask the Library: http://uba.uva.nl/en/contact, or a letter to: Library of the University of Amsterdam, Secretariat, Singel 425, 1012 WP Amsterdam, The Netherlands. You will be contacted as soon as possible. Abstract -For more than 20 years it has been debated if yield stress fluids are solid below the yield stress or actually flow; whether true yield stress fluids exist or not. Advocates of the true yield stress picture have demonstrated that the effective viscosity increases very rapidly as the stress is decreased towards the yield stress. Opponents have shown that this viscosity increase levels off, and that the material behaves as a Newtonian fluid of very high viscosity below the yield stress.In this paper, we demonstrate experimentally (on four different materials, using three different rheometers, five different geometries, and two different measurement methods) that the low-stress Newtonian viscosity is an artifact that arises in non-steady-state experiments. For measurements as long as 10 4 seconds we find that the value of the "Newtonian viscosity" increases indefinitely. This proves that the yield stress exists and marks a sharp transition between flowing states and states where the steady-state viscosity is infinite -a solid!
Using high-speed video, we have studied air bubbles detaching from an underwater nozzle. As a bubble distorts, it forms a thin neck which develops a singular shape as it pinches off. As in other singularities, the minimum neck radius scales with the time until breakup. However, because the air-water interfacial tension does not drive breakup, even small initial cylindrical asymmetries are preserved throughout the collapse. This novel, non-universal singularity retains a memory of the nozzle shape, size and tilt angle. In the last stages, the air appears to tear instead of pinch.PACS numbers: 47.55.db, 47.55.df, 02.40.Xx The delightful tingling felt when drinking carbonated beverages, the glee of children blowing bubbles in a bathtub, and the importance of deep underwater fissures venting gasses into the oceans hint at the richness and significance of bubble formation in determining the texture and composition of our world. However, the process by which a bubble is formed is still full of surprises. A drop or bubble breaks up by forming a neck that thins to atomic dimensions, a process described as an approach towards a singularity where physical quantities such as stress or pressure grow infinitely large. Singularities often organize the overall dynamical evolution of nonlinear systems. Each symmetry in nature implies an underlying conservation law, so that the symmetries of the singularity associated with pinch-off naturally have important consequences for its dynamics. It was previously believed [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12] that the pinching neck of any drop or bubble would become cylindrically (i.e. azimuthally) symmetric in the course of pinch-off. Recently, pinching necks of air in water were observed to lose cylindrical symmetry in the course of detachment [13,14].Here we show that this loss of symmetry is caused by a new form of memory in singular dynamics: even a small asymmetry in the initial conditions is preserved throughout bubble detachment. This novel singularity retains a memory of the nozzle shape, size and tilt angle. The asymmetry can be made so great that the air appears to tear. This symmetry breaking may be important in numerous applications [15,16,17], and for understanding other physical processes which are modeled as the formation of a singularity, such as star or black hole formation [18] and supernova explosions [19]. Thus our experimental observation of the breakdown of cylindrical symmetry in the air bubble demonstrates a new view of dynamical singularities that may be relevant even on a celestial scale.Singularities govern the dynamics in many familiar break-up events, such as the dispersal of oil drops into * Electronic address: nkeim@uchicago.edu vinegar during the making of a salad dressing, or the dripping of water from a leaky faucet. For many fluid pairs -for example, one viscous fluid breaking in a surrounding fluid of high viscosity [7,8,12] -the shape and dynamics of the pinching neck depend solely on the fluid parameters, as the breakup forgets its initial conditions on ...
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