1934
DOI: 10.1063/1.1745219
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The Conicylindrical Viscometer

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Cited by 152 publications
(58 citation statements)
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“…This graphical construction is required because the capacitance changes in a nonlinear manner; therefore, the The calibration of the rheogoniometer is quite involved, in that many factors have to be checked out. These include: (1) determination of the constant for the torque bar (This is carried out by measuring the resonant frequency of the torque assembly with and without added weight, then calculating its moment of inertia. By this means the torque constant was calculated as T = 1.65 X lo' dyne-cm./radian, as compared to 1.66 X lo7 dyne-cm./radian found by Jobling.)…”
Section: The Rheogoniometermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This graphical construction is required because the capacitance changes in a nonlinear manner; therefore, the The calibration of the rheogoniometer is quite involved, in that many factors have to be checked out. These include: (1) determination of the constant for the torque bar (This is carried out by measuring the resonant frequency of the torque assembly with and without added weight, then calculating its moment of inertia. By this means the torque constant was calculated as T = 1.65 X lo' dyne-cm./radian, as compared to 1.66 X lo7 dyne-cm./radian found by Jobling.)…”
Section: The Rheogoniometermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Introduced in 1934 by Mooney and Ewart [42], it was later used as an alternative to the coaxial Couette viscometers to measure viscosity of biological fluids [43]. The cone and plate viscometer (CPV) has been extensively used since the early 1980s to measure platelet activation, blood viscosity and RBC damage (hemolysis) [44][45][46].…”
Section: Cone and Plate Viscometers Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The instrument is calibrated using PolyDiMethylSiloxane (PDMS) oils which are available in a wide range of viscosities over which they are highly Newtonian. The instrument is used with a 'Mooney-Ewart' geometry [19] tool manufactured from acrylic. The viscosity is measured for increasing and decreasing shear rates allowing the rheological properties of the gel to be studied for a static and flowing fluid.…”
Section: P O S T P R I N T ( P R O O F C O P Y )mentioning
confidence: 99%