Issue 5, 2023

Rheology of 3D printable ceramic suspensions: effects of non-adsorbing polymer on discontinuous shear thickening

Abstract

Concentrated suspensions of particles at volume fractions (ϕ) ≥ 0.5 often exhibit complex rheological behavior, transitioning from shear thinning to shear thickening as the shear stress or shear rate is increased. These suspensions can be extruded to form 3D structures, with non-adsorbing polymers often added as rheology modifiers to improve printability. Understanding how non-adsorbing polymers affect the suspension rheology, particularly the onset of shear thickening, is critical to the design of particle inks that will extrude uniformly. In this work, we examine the rheology of concentrated aqueous suspensions of colloidal alumina particles and the effects of adding non-adsorbing polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP). First, we show that suspensions with ϕalumina = 0.560–0.575 exhibited discontinuous shear thickening (DST), where the viscosity increased by up to two orders of magnitude above an onset stress (τmin). Increasing ϕalumina from 0.550 to 0.575 increased the viscosity and yield stress in the shear thinning regime and decreased τmin. Next, PVP was added at concentrations within the dilute and semi-dilute non-entangled regimes of polymer conformation (ϕPVP = 0.005–0.050) to suspensions with constant ϕalumina = 0.550. DST was observed in all cases and increasing ϕPVP increased the viscosity and yield stress. Interestingly, increasing ϕPVP also increased τmin. We posit that the free PVP chains act as lubricants between alumina particles, increasing the stress needed to induce thickening. Finally, we demonstrate through direct comparisons of suspensions with and without PVP how non-adsorbing polymer addition can extend the extrusion processing window due to the increase in τmin.

Graphical abstract: Rheology of 3D printable ceramic suspensions: effects of non-adsorbing polymer on discontinuous shear thickening

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
22 Oct 2022
Accepted
09 Jan 2023
First published
09 Jan 2023

Soft Matter, 2023,19, 882-891

Author version available

Rheology of 3D printable ceramic suspensions: effects of non-adsorbing polymer on discontinuous shear thickening

R. D. Corder, Y. Chen, P. Pibulchinda, J. P. Youngblood, A. M. Ardekani and K. A. Erk, Soft Matter, 2023, 19, 882 DOI: 10.1039/D2SM01396G

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