Order-disorder transition during shear thickening in bidisperse dense suspensions

J Colloid Interface Sci. 2024 May 15:662:1044-1051. doi: 10.1016/j.jcis.2024.02.033. Epub 2024 Feb 5.

Abstract

Shear thickening of multimodal suspensions has proven difficult to understand because the rheology depends largely on the microscopic details of stress-induced frictional contacts at different particle size distributions (PSDs). Our discrete particle simulations below a critical volume fraction ϕc over a broad range of shear rates and PSDs elucidate the basic mechanism of order-disorder transition. Around the theoretical optimal PSD (relative content of small particles ζ1= 0.26), particles order into a layered structure in the Newtonian regime. At the onset of shear thickening, this layered structure transforms to a disordered one, accompanied by an abrupt viscosity jump. Minor increase in large-large particle contacts after the order-disorder transition causes apparent increase in radial force along the compressional axis. Bidisperse suspensions with less regular but stable layered structure at ζ1= 0.50 show good fluidity in the shear thickening regime. This work shows that in inertial flows where particle collisions dominate, order-disorder transition could play an essential role in shear thickening for bidisperse suspensions.

Keywords: Bidisperse suspension; Numerical simulation; Order–disorder transition; Shear thickening.