The effect of pressure and temperature on the shear and elongational deformation rateϪdependent viscosities has been experimentally investigated for several polymers (HDPE, LDPE, LLDPE, PP, PC, PMMA, and PS) on a capillary rheometer with a backpressure device. Pressure, , and temperature, ␣, coefficients have been determined through simultaneous fitting of the shear and extensional viscosity data by the modified White-Metzner model. The dependence of  and ␣ on temperature and pressure, respectively, was investigated and it has been found that simple relationships exist between pressure and temperature sensitivity coefficients for individual polymers.
The sedimentation caused by the high density of suspended particles used in magnetorheological fluids is a significant obstacle for their wider application. In the present paper, core-shell structured carbonyl ironpolyaniline particles in silicone oil were used as a magnetorheological suspension with enhanced dispersion stability. Bare carbonyl iron particles were suspended in silicone oil to create model magnetorheological suspensions of different loading. For a magnetorheological suspension of polyaniline-coated particles the results show a decrease in the base viscosity. Moreover, the polyaniline coating has a negligible influence on the MR properties under an external magnetic field B. The change in the viscoelastic properties of magnetorheological suspensions in the small-strain oscillatory shear flow as a function of the strain amplitude, the frequency and the magnetic flux density was also investigated.
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