Time dependence in large amplitude oscillatory shear: a rheo-ultrasonic study of fatigue dynamics in a colloidal gel
arXiv:1401.3369 · doi:10.1122/1.4887081
Abstract
We report on the response of a yield stress material, namely a colloidal gel made of attractive carbon black particles, submitted to large amplitude oscillatory shear stress (LAOStress). At a constant stress amplitude well below its apparent yield stress, the gel displays fatigue and progressively turns from an elastic solid to a viscous fluid. The time-resolved analysis of the strain response, of the Fourier spectrum, and of Lissajous plots allows one to define two different timescales $Ï_w<Ï_f$ associated with the yielding and fluidization of the gel. Coupling rheology to ultrasonic imaging further leads to a local picture of the LAOStress response in which the gel first fails at the walls at $Ï_w$ and then undergoes a slow heterogeneous fluidization involving solid--fluid coexistence until the whole sample is fluid at $Ï_f$. Spatial heterogeneities are observed in both the gradient and vorticity directions and suggest a fragmentation of the initially solidlike gel into macroscopic domains eroded by the surrounding fluidized suspension.
21 pages, 11, figures, submitted to the Journal of Rheology