Complex fluids are mixtures of different materials and fluids. Usually, we consider the coexistence between two phases: solid–liquid (like suspensions or solutions of polymers, proteins or DNA), solid–gas (like granular materials), liquid–gas (like foams) or liquid–liquid (like emulsions). Complex fluids exhibit unusual mechanical responses to applied stress or deformation. The mechanical response includes non-linear behaviors such as shear thinning or shear thickening as well as large fluctuations (elastic turbulence). The mechanical properties of complex fluids can be attributed to characteristics such as polymer unfolding, caging, or clustering on multiple length scales. The course deals mainly with two kinds of complex fluids: polymer fluids and suspensions.
Content:
1. Introduction to Complex fluids in nature and in industry
2. Conservation laws. Matter, Momentum and Energy
3. Standard flows (Poiseuille flow, Couette flow).
4. Dissipation
5. Polymer fluids
Non-linear fluids and shear dependent viscosity
Normal stresses and Weissenberg experiment
From nano to macro: starting from a polymer chain to macroscopic properties
6. Suspensions
Rheology
Homogenization
Taylor dispersion
Active suspension (natural and artificial nano and micro-swimmers)
Prerequisites:
Basis in hydrodynamics
Bibliography:
Dynamics of polymeric liquids, B. Bird, vol 1 & 2, John Wiley & Sons Ed. 1987
The structure and Rheology of Complex Fluids, Ronald Larson, Oxford Univ. Press, 1999
Published on April 11, 2019 Updated on December 2, 2020
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