897 research outputs found
Normal force controlled rheology applied to agar gelation
A wide range of thermoreversible gels are prepared by cooling down to ambient
temperature hot aqueous polymer solutions. During the sol-gel transition, such
materials may experience a volume contraction which is traditionally overlooked
as rheological measurements are usually performed in geometries of constant
volume. In this article, we revisit the formation of 1.5\% wt. agar gels
through a series of benchmark rheological experiments performed with a
plate-plate geometry. We demonstrate on that particular gel of polysaccharides
that the contraction associated with the sol/gel transition cannot be
neglected. Indeed, imposing a constant gap width during the gelation results in
the strain hardening of the sample, as evidenced by the large negative normal
force that develops. Such hardening leads to the slow drift in time of the gel
elastic modulus towards ever larger values, and thus to an erroneous
estimate of . As an alternative, we show that imposing a constant normal
force equals to zero during the gelation, instead of a constant gap width,
suppresses the hardening as the decrease of the gap compensates for the sample
contraction. Using normal force controlled rheology, we then investigate the
impact of thermal history on 1.5\% wt. agar gels. We show that neither the
value of the cooling rate, nor the introduction of a constant temperature stage
during the cooling process influence the gel elastic properties. Instead,
only depends on the terminal temperature reached at the end of the cooling
ramp, as confirmed by direct imaging of the gel microstructure by cryoelectron
microscopy. The present work offers an extensive review of the technical
difficulties associated with the rheology of hydrogels and paves the way for a
systematic use of normal force controlled rheology to monitor non-isochoric
processes.Comment: 19 pages, 15 figures - accepted for publication in Journal of
Rheolog
Data traffic load balancing and QoS in IEEE 802.11 network: Experimental study of the signal strength effect
The performances of multimedia applications built on wireless systems depend
on bandwidth availability that might heavily affect the quality of service. The
IEEE 802.11 standards do not provide performed mechanism for bandwidth
management through data load distribution among different APs of the network.
Then, an AP can be heavily overloaded causing throughput degradation. Load
Balancing Algorithms (LBAs) was been considered as one of the attractive
solution to share the traffic through the available access points bandwidths.
However, applying the load balancing algorithm and shifting a mobile connection
from an access point to another without considering the received signal
strength indicator of the concerned APs might causes worst communication
performances. This paper is a contribution to check the performance's limits of
the LBA algorithm through experimental evaluation of communication metrics for
MPEG-4 video transmission over IEEE 802.11 network. Then, the paper focuses on
the proposition of a new LBA algorithm structure with the consideration of the
RSS level
Invited review: Effect of temperature on a granular pile
As a fragile construction, a granular pile is very sensitive to minute
external perturbations. In particular, it is now well established that a
granular assembly is sensitive to variations of temperature. Such variations
can produce localized rearrangements as well as global static avalanches inside
a pile. In this review, we sum up the various observations that have been made
concerning the effect of temperature on a granular assembly. In particular, we
dwell on the way controlled variations of temperature have been employed to
generate the compaction of a granular pile. After laying emphasis on the key
features of this compaction process, we compare it to the classic
vibration-induced compaction. Finally, we also review other granular systems in
a large sense, from microscopic (jammed multilamellar vesicles) to macroscopic
scales (stone heave phenomenon linked to freezing and thawing of soils) for
which periodic variations of temperature could play a key role in the dynamics
at stake.Comment: 16 pages, 14 figures, Commentary from the reviewer available in
Papers in Physic
Rheological hysteresis in soft glassy materials
The nonlinear rheology of a soft glassy material is captured by its
constitutive relation, shear stress vs shear rate, which is most generally
obtained by sweeping up or down the shear rate over a finite temporal window.
For a huge amount of complex fluids, the up and down sweeps do not superimpose
and define a rheological hysteresis loop. By means of extensive rheometry
coupled to time-resolved velocimetry, we unravel the local scenario involved in
rheological hysteresis for various types of well-studied soft materials. We
introduce two observables that quantify the hysteresis in macroscopic rheology
and local velocimetry respectively, as a function of the sweep rate \delta
t^{-1}. Strikingly, both observables present a robust maximum with \delta t,
which defines a single material-dependent timescale that grows continuously
from vanishingly small values in simple yield stress fluids to large values for
strongly time-dependent materials. In line with recent theoretical arguments,
these experimental results hint at a universal timescale-based framework for
soft glassy materials, where inhomogeneous flows characterized by shear bands
and/or pluglike flow play a central role.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures & supplemental materials: 3 pages, 3 figure
Yielding dynamics of a Herschel-Bulkley fluid: a critical-like fluidization behaviour
The shear-induced fluidization of a carbopol microgel is investigated during
long start-up experiments using combined rheology and velocimetry in Couette
cells of varying gap widths and boundary conditions. As already described in
[Divoux et al., {\it Phys. Rev. Lett.}, 2010, {\bf 104}, 208301], we show that
the fluidization process of this simple yield stress fluid involves a transient
shear-banding regime whose duration decreases as a power law of the
applied shear rate \gp. Here we go one step further by an exhaustive
investigation of the influence of the shearing geometry through the gap width
and the boundary conditions. While slip conditions at the walls seem to
have a negligible influence on the fluidization time , different
fluidization processes are observed depending on \gp and : the shear band
remains almost stationary for several hours at low shear rates or small gap
widths before strong fluctuations lead to a homogeneous flow, whereas at larger
values of \gp or , the transient shear band is seen to invade the whole
gap in a much smoother way. Still, the power-law behaviour appears as very
robust and hints to critical-like dynamics. To further discuss these results,
we propose (i) a qualitative scenario to explain the induction-like period that
precedes full fluidization and (ii) an analogy with critical phenomena that
naturally leads to the observed power laws if one assumes that the yield point
is the critical point of an underlying out-of-equilibrium phase transition.Comment: 16 pages, 14+2 figures, published in Soft Matte
Wall slip across the jamming transition of soft thermoresponsive particles
Flows of suspensions are often affected by wall slip, that is the fluid
velocity in the vicinity of a boundary differs from the wall velocity
due to the presence of a lubrication layer. While the slip velocity
robustly scales linearly with the stress
at the wall in dilute suspensions, there is no consensus regarding denser
suspensions that are sheared in the bulk, for which slip velocities have been
reported to scale as a with exponents inconsistently
ranging between 0 and 2. Here we focus on a suspension of soft thermoresponsive
particles and show that actually scales as a power law of the viscous
stress , where denotes the yield stress of the bulk
material. By tuning the temperature across the jamming transition, we further
demonstrate that this scaling holds true over a large range of packing
fractions on both sides of the jamming point and that the exponent
increases continuously with , from in the case of dilute
suspensions to for jammed assemblies. These results allow us to
successfully revisit inconsistent data from the literature and paves the way
for a continuous description of wall slip above and below jamming.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures - accepted for publication as a Rapid
Communication in Phys. Rev.
Transient Shear Banding in a Simple Yield Stress Fluid
We report a large set of experimental data which demonstrates that a simple
yield stress fluid, i.e. which does not present aging or thixotropy, exhibits
transient shear banding before reaching a steady state characterized by a
homogeneous, linear velocity profile. The duration of the transient regime
decreases as a power law with the applied shear rate . This power
law behavior, observed here in carbopol dispersions, does not depend on the gap
width and on the boundary conditions for a given sample preparation. For
s, heterogeneous flows could be observed for as
long as 10 s. These local dynamics account for the ultraslow stress
relaxation observed at low shear rates.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Calibration of force actuators on an adaptive secondary prototype
In the context of the Large Binocular Telescope project, we present the
results of force actuator calibrations performed on an adaptive secondary
prototype called P45, a thin deformable glass with magnets glued onto its back.
Electromagnetic actuators, controlled in a closed loop with a system of
internal metrology based on capacitive sensors, continuously deform its shape
to correct the distortions of the wavefront. Calibrations of the force
actuators are needed because of the differences between driven forces and
measured forces. We describe the calibration procedures and the results,
obtained with errors of less than 1.5%.Comment: 7 page
Friction and dilatancy in immersed granular matter.
The friction of a sliding plate on a thin immersed granular layer obeys Amonton-Coulomb law. We bring to the fore a large set of experimental results which indicate that, over a few decades of values, the effective dynamical friction-coefficient depends neither on the viscosity of the interstitial fluid nor on the size of beads in the sheared layer, which bears out the analogy with the solid-solid friction in a wide range of experimental parameters. We accurately determine the granular-layer dilatancy, which dependance on the grain size and slider velocity can be qualitatively accounted by considering the rheological behaviour of the whole slurry. However, additional results, obtained after modification of the grain surface by a chemical treatment, demonstrate that the theoretical description of the flow properties of dense granular matter, even immersed, requires the detailed properties of the grain surface to be taken into account
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