In-line rheometry of particulate suspensions by pulsed ultrasound velocimetry combined with pressure difference method
(2012) In Applied Rheology 22(4). p.42232-42232- Abstract
- The in-line rheometer concept based on the combination of the ultrasonic velocity profiling (UVP) technique and pressure difference (PD) measurements was utilized for investigating the influence of particle concentration and size distribution on the rheology of particulate suspensions in pipe flow under realistic industrial process conditions. Well defined model suspensions were used, consisting of 11 mu m and 90 mu m diameter polyamide particles suspended in rapeseed oil at concentrations ranging from 1 to 25 % by volume. The variation of concentration and particle size distribution had the expected effects on the shear viscositiy of the investigated uni-modal and bimodal suspensions. The in-line results showed that the investigated... (More)
- The in-line rheometer concept based on the combination of the ultrasonic velocity profiling (UVP) technique and pressure difference (PD) measurements was utilized for investigating the influence of particle concentration and size distribution on the rheology of particulate suspensions in pipe flow under realistic industrial process conditions. Well defined model suspensions were used, consisting of 11 mu m and 90 mu m diameter polyamide particles suspended in rapeseed oil at concentrations ranging from 1 to 25 % by volume. The variation of concentration and particle size distribution had the expected effects on the shear viscositiy of the investigated uni-modal and bimodal suspensions. The in-line results showed that the investigated suspensions exhibit Sisko flow behavior and demonstrated that the UVP+PD method can be used to determine the flow behavior of complex fluids and suspensions, even at high solid concentrations, under industrial conditions in-line. The obtained in-line results were in good agreement with measurement data obtained using a conventional rotational controlled-stress rheometer. Limitations of commercially available transducer technology were identified and other possible sources of inaccuracy of the UVP+PD method were investigated. Several improvements of the UVP+PD measurement method were proposed. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/3284040
- author
- Wiklund, Johan LU ; Birkhofer, Beat ; Jeelani, Shaik A. K. ; Stading, Mats T. and Windhab, Erich J.
- organization
- publishing date
- 2012
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- in-line rheology, particulate suspensions, bimodal suspensions, velocity, profiles
- in
- Applied Rheology
- volume
- 22
- issue
- 4
- pages
- 42232 - 42232
- publisher
- De Gruyter
- external identifiers
-
- wos:000310494400010
- scopus:84867363931
- ISSN
- 1430-6395
- DOI
- 10.3933/ApplRheol-22-42232
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 066c90ec-3998-4196-9659-6396bf1e6648 (old id 3284040)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 10:18:44
- date last changed
- 2023-10-26 07:15:53
@article{066c90ec-3998-4196-9659-6396bf1e6648, abstract = {{The in-line rheometer concept based on the combination of the ultrasonic velocity profiling (UVP) technique and pressure difference (PD) measurements was utilized for investigating the influence of particle concentration and size distribution on the rheology of particulate suspensions in pipe flow under realistic industrial process conditions. Well defined model suspensions were used, consisting of 11 mu m and 90 mu m diameter polyamide particles suspended in rapeseed oil at concentrations ranging from 1 to 25 % by volume. The variation of concentration and particle size distribution had the expected effects on the shear viscositiy of the investigated uni-modal and bimodal suspensions. The in-line results showed that the investigated suspensions exhibit Sisko flow behavior and demonstrated that the UVP+PD method can be used to determine the flow behavior of complex fluids and suspensions, even at high solid concentrations, under industrial conditions in-line. The obtained in-line results were in good agreement with measurement data obtained using a conventional rotational controlled-stress rheometer. Limitations of commercially available transducer technology were identified and other possible sources of inaccuracy of the UVP+PD method were investigated. Several improvements of the UVP+PD measurement method were proposed.}}, author = {{Wiklund, Johan and Birkhofer, Beat and Jeelani, Shaik A. K. and Stading, Mats T. and Windhab, Erich J.}}, issn = {{1430-6395}}, keywords = {{in-line rheology; particulate suspensions; bimodal suspensions; velocity; profiles}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{4}}, pages = {{42232--42232}}, publisher = {{De Gruyter}}, series = {{Applied Rheology}}, title = {{In-line rheometry of particulate suspensions by pulsed ultrasound velocimetry combined with pressure difference method}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3933/ApplRheol-22-42232}}, doi = {{10.3933/ApplRheol-22-42232}}, volume = {{22}}, year = {{2012}}, }