Abstract

The flow behavior of bidisperse aqueous silica suspensions has been studied at different electrolyte concentrations as a function of shear rate, total volume fraction of the particles, and volume ratio of small to large particles. It is shown that the range of the electrostatic repulsion plays an important role in determining the viscosity of the suspension. Binary mixtures of particles of longer range repulsive forces showed higher viscosities than the suspensions of shorter range electrostatic interactions. Bimodal suspensions of long-range interactions showed non-Newtonian behavior over wider ranges of shear due to the deformation of the ionic cloud around the particles, which is larger in these systems. The viscosity of bimodal suspensions used in this study was scaled with respect to the viscosity of the related monosized systems and the viscosity of one bimodal suspension at a fixed total volume fraction of the particles, employing our earlier scaling method. The model normalizes the effect of colloidal forces by introducing a scaling factor that collapses the data into a single curve for bimodal suspensions of a particular size ratio, and it is shown that the model is valid for systems with both short-range and long-range repulsive forces.

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