Abstract

Rheological responses of hydrophobic fumed silica powders, whose surface silanol groups were modified by hexadecane, suspended in 1,4-dioxane at lower silica concentrations than 6.8 vol% have been investigated as a function of the silica concentration. Transient shear stress behavior before attaining the steady-state shear stress could be classified into three regimes as follows, irrespective of the silica concentration: at the lower shear rates than ca. 0.3 s−1 a stress overshoot was observed, at the shear rate ranges from 0.3 to 30 s−1 sustained oscillations in shear stresses were exhibited and these oscillations were first observed for the suspensions at the low particle concentrations, and beyond the shear rate of 30 s−1 a sigmoid decrease of the shear stress with increasing time, that is, structural breakdown, was observed. At the steady state the silica suspensions showed shear thickening. Small angle neutron scattering (SANS) measurements of the silica suspension under shear flow provided that changes in the SANS intensities were well correlated with the shear thickening behavior. However, shear thinning behavior at higher shear rates did not cause any changes in the SANS intensities.

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