Issue 4, 1983

Viscoelastic shear thinning of liquids. A molecular-dynamics study

Abstract

A molecular-dynamics investigation into the microscopic response of simple liquids subjected to severe shearing conditions is discussed. The quantitative behaviour of a model Lennard-Jones liquid and experimental data on more complicated molecular fluids at high levels of stress are strikingly similar, provided appropriate adjustments of characteristic relaxation time-scales are made.

The simulations give insights into the structural origin of material failure at high shear stresses and reveal, at high pressures, a restructuring of the medium into layers, which permits easier flow and hence reduces its viscosity. This change is also manifest in an increase of internal pressure (at constant volume) and a decrease in low-frequency shear rigidity modulus and thermal conductivity.

Associated temperature distributions in the non-linear region of viscosity are consistent with macroscopic continuum theory, suggesting that the thermal effects due to shear are essentially decoupled from any parallel structural changes.

Article information

Article type
Paper

J. Chem. Soc., Faraday Trans. 2, 1983,79, 611-635

Viscoelastic shear thinning of liquids. A molecular-dynamics study

D. M. Heyes, C. J. Montrose and T. A. Litovitz, J. Chem. Soc., Faraday Trans. 2, 1983, 79, 611 DOI: 10.1039/F29837900611

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