2004
DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.92.055501
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Spatiotemporal Rheochaos in Nematic Hydrodynamics

Abstract: Motivated by recent observations of rheochaos in sheared wormlike micelles, we study the coupled nonlinear partial differential equations for the hydrodynamic velocity and order-parameter fields in a sheared nematogenic fluid. In a suitable parameter range, we find irregular, dynamic shear banding and establish by decisive numerical tests that the chaos we observe in the model is spatiotemporal in nature.

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Cited by 54 publications
(67 citation statements)
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“…Our model exhibits spatio-temporal chaos. The corresponding space-time patterns are varied, but fall into a common picture (coherent with that of other groups [32,33]): rheochaos manifests as a flow that restlessly attempts to form steady shear bands, but fails due to internal structural constraints.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 85%
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“…Our model exhibits spatio-temporal chaos. The corresponding space-time patterns are varied, but fall into a common picture (coherent with that of other groups [32,33]): rheochaos manifests as a flow that restlessly attempts to form steady shear bands, but fails due to internal structural constraints.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…The results we have presented so far, along with other works [27,32,33], might be taken to suggest a generic interpretation of rheochaos in complex fluids as resulting from the erratic motion of discrete interfaces between shear bands. This idea is appealing because, in turn, it suggests that rheochaos may be more efficiently modelled by focussing on interfacial dynamics and writing an equation of motion directly for the interface [27,56] (rather than for the whole fluid as we are doing here).…”
Section: Low-order Resultsmentioning
confidence: 93%
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“…This includes transitions to stable statically distorted deformations of the director field (Freedericksz transition [7]), shear banding [8], and even the onset of turbulent and chaotic behavior in the presence of shear [9]. Active liquid crystals exhibit a similar wealth of phenomena due to internal forcing, i.e., spontaneously.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%