The invention relates to a viscometer and a process for measuring the viscosity of a fluid and the shear rate sensitivity thereof.
There are a number of various viscometers and viscometry processes. Several of these rely on the displacement of a ball or a solid body in the fluid whose viscosity is to be measured; others measure the deformation rate of a fluid sample, in suspension or submitted to a constant load. The invention relates to the field of relaxation viscometry, where the fluid, split into drops by capillarity forces, is flattened for some time before being freed to recover its initial shape; the viscosity is derived from the rate of relaxation of the fluid.
This viscometry method features noticeable advantages: it is a fast measurement which involves a small amount of fluid, which proves very interesting for experimental products whose manufacturing is difficult or expensive; it applies to a wide range of viscosities; and finally, it implies no contact between the fluid and the viscometer parts, as this device is of “gas lifting type”, which means that a gas flow is blown through a lower wedge-shaped plate, on which the drop is deposited, arid an upper plate intended far flattening the drop: the gas pressure maintains the fluid at a distance from the plates, so that neither chemical interaction occurs with the said plates, nor crystal germination when the fluid is diphasic. Preferably, the lower plate is wedge-shaped but it may have various other shapes.
The invention may apply to non-Newtonian fluids, whose viscosity coefficient varies according to the shearing rate of the fluid. The shear rate of a fluid γ is defined as the gradient of the speed V along the direction z perpendicular to this speed, that is γ=dV/dz. The viscosity of Newtonian fluids may be directly derived by means of a correlation calculated over the time function following which the drop recovers its original shape, which is not possible with non-Newtonian fluid, as the shear rate of the drop decreases when the drop recovers its shape: the viscosity of such fluids varies during the trial.
The invention brings a solution to this problem, thanks to a viscometry process which applies to a drop of fluid which is flattened, then let free to recover its shape, with sequential measurements of the drop height along time, with the calculation of a characteristic relaxation time constant in terms of the measured heights, using a correlation function, then a viscosity calculation. The said calculations of the characteristic relaxation time constant and viscosity are carried out on various portions of measurement curves according to respective correlation functions, and a value of the shear rate of the drop is thus obtained for each of said measurement portions. In other words, the viscosity and apparent shear rate measurement process is characterized in that it comprises the steps of:
The wording “geometrical dimensions” refers to various diameters of the drop. Preferably, the height of the drop is measured (diameter deformed along the axisymmetric axis).
It is advisable to perform several time the process while submitting the fluid to various magnetic field intensities. The proposed device, in the latter case, according to another aspect of the invention, becomes a viscometer including an upper plate and a lower plate facing each other which both may be moved along the vertical direction, the lower plate being for example wedge-shaped, characterized in that it includes a generator producing a magnetic field whose amplitude may be modulated in the space located between the said upper and lower plates. The generator may be an electromagnetic coil fitted with a removable screen located between the coil and the said space.
The invention will be described hereafter, with reference to the following figures, which show a preferred realization of the invention:
The
As seen on
The measurements to be carried out are detailed in the following. The lifting gas is blown through plates 7 and 8 and the sample A is introduced on the upper face 10 of the lower plate 7; if the sample A is a solid, it is heated till it reaches a pasty or fluid state and lifted over the upper face 10 of the lower plate 7; the capillarity forces make the sample to take a noticeably spherical form; the lower plate 7 is then slowly lifted till the drop reaches the upper plate 8, then lifted again by a quantity Δh0, which induces a flattening of the drop. The upper plate 8 is then abruptly lifted up to free the sample A from strain.
The camera 4 records the evolution of the shape of sample A, which permits to measure the rate at which the drop recovers its initial shape, and, in particular, the height H(t) of its top at any time t. It is an oscillating phenomenon, which is aperiodic except for the fluids of very low viscosity, which may be characterised by a relaxation time constant .tau. which depends itself on the viscosity coefficient .eta. In the case of a Newtonian fluid, an aperiodic relaxation may be expressed by the relation (1);
where h=0 at the relaxing instant t=0 and h=Δh0 when the drop has recovered its shape. A correlation calculation between the measured function h(t) and this exponential function yields the relaxation time constant τ; another way of doing, though less accurate, consists in applying a linear regression to the beginning of the measured curve. The relation (2):
then gives the viscosity coefficient η in terms of the superficial tension σ of the material and the radius R of the drop.
These calculations are then valid for Newtonian fluids, in which case the relation σ=ρ×γ is pertinent; if the sample A proves to be non-Newtonian, i.e, if its viscosity ρ varies according to the shear rate γ, the relaxation of the drop induces a continuous variation of its viscosity ρ since the shear rate decreases as the drop recovers its initial shape one might think that these measurements are not suitable for such materials. It is not true, anyway, provided that a less simple process is involved, using local parameters of the relaxation curve: according to the invention, one calculates the slope of the relaxation curve following the relation (4):
curve following the relation (4): where Hi−1, Hi and Hi+1 are the heights of the top of the drop at times ti−1, ti and ti+1, assuming that the relaxation function may be locally expressed by the relation (5)
where the coefficient τi is the characteristic
relaxation time constant at this time. One uses the
relations (6) and (7)
which yield the shear rate at this instant using the relation (8):
where l is the characteristic shear length. The speed value V from relation (1) is here vertical, and the direction z is radial. As the drop stays symmetrically around the vertical axis, the shear is zero on the axis as well as at the equator and it is then adequate to retain for l half the value of the drop radius. The viscosity ηi at this time is then evaluated using the
relation (2). Corrections taking into account sphericity anomalies of the drop may be introduced. I particular, one may introduce the form factor Fg: where m is the sample mass, ρ its density, g the gravity constant, Re the equivalent radius and lc the capillary length; the relation (2) remains valid when Fg<1. One thus obtains the required data for plotting a curve which represents the viscosity η in terms of the shear rate γ′. The last step consists in estimating the sensitiveness of viscosity to the shear rate by means of a correlation over this curve, which amounts to calculate the coefficient n in the relation (9):
η=η0×(γ′)(n−1)
The
Any means for creating a magnetic field or stopping it or making it vary should be appropriate.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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99 16020 | Dec 1999 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR00/03522 | 12/14/2000 | WO | 00 | 5/30/2002 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO01/44785 | 6/21/2001 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20020178796 A1 | Dec 2002 | US |