Rheology of Complex Fluid-Fluid Interfaces: A Unified Approach Based on Nonequilibrium Thermodynamics

Surface rheological properties affect the dynamics of vesicles, nanoparticles, emulsion droplets, foam bubbles, polymer microcapsules, liquid jets, living cells, lung avioli, thin liquid films, and many other multiphase systems. Surface rheology is therefore relevant for a wide range of disciplines...

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Main Author: Sagis Leonard M.C.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2010-04-01
Series:Applied Rheology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3933/applrheol-20-24380
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spelling doaj-5ac9a0c2518b45bc932522080e489e882021-09-06T19:41:54ZengDe GruyterApplied Rheology1617-81062010-04-0120210.3933/applrheol-20-24380Rheology of Complex Fluid-Fluid Interfaces: A Unified Approach Based on Nonequilibrium ThermodynamicsSagis Leonard M.C.0Physics Group, Wageningen University, Bomenweg 2, 6703 HDWageningen, The NetherlandsSurface rheological properties affect the dynamics of vesicles, nanoparticles, emulsion droplets, foam bubbles, polymer microcapsules, liquid jets, living cells, lung avioli, thin liquid films, and many other multiphase systems. Surface rheology is therefore relevant for a wide range of disciplines in the areas of physics, chemistry, engineering, biology, and medicine. Currently used descriptions of surface rheology have a number of limitations, and in particular are hard to generalize to the large deformation regime. Data are often analyzed with constitutive equations based on straightforward generalizations of models developed for describing bulk phase rheology. Since the latter are in general designed to describe incompressible materials, they are not guaranteed to describe highly compressible interfaces correctly. Here we discuss a unified approach to surface rheology based on nonequilibrium thermodynamics (NET) that provides a consistent set of balance and constitutive equations for the unambiguous determination of surface rheological parameters, both near and far beyond equilibrium. A closer integration of experimental surface rheology and multiphase nonequilibrium thermodynamics would clearly be beneficial for both disciplines.https://doi.org/10.3933/applrheol-20-24380surface rheologyfluid-fluid interfacenonequilibrium thermodynamics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sagis Leonard M.C.
spellingShingle Sagis Leonard M.C.
Rheology of Complex Fluid-Fluid Interfaces: A Unified Approach Based on Nonequilibrium Thermodynamics
Applied Rheology
surface rheology
fluid-fluid interface
nonequilibrium thermodynamics
author_facet Sagis Leonard M.C.
author_sort Sagis Leonard M.C.
title Rheology of Complex Fluid-Fluid Interfaces: A Unified Approach Based on Nonequilibrium Thermodynamics
title_short Rheology of Complex Fluid-Fluid Interfaces: A Unified Approach Based on Nonequilibrium Thermodynamics
title_full Rheology of Complex Fluid-Fluid Interfaces: A Unified Approach Based on Nonequilibrium Thermodynamics
title_fullStr Rheology of Complex Fluid-Fluid Interfaces: A Unified Approach Based on Nonequilibrium Thermodynamics
title_full_unstemmed Rheology of Complex Fluid-Fluid Interfaces: A Unified Approach Based on Nonequilibrium Thermodynamics
title_sort rheology of complex fluid-fluid interfaces: a unified approach based on nonequilibrium thermodynamics
publisher De Gruyter
series Applied Rheology
issn 1617-8106
publishDate 2010-04-01
description Surface rheological properties affect the dynamics of vesicles, nanoparticles, emulsion droplets, foam bubbles, polymer microcapsules, liquid jets, living cells, lung avioli, thin liquid films, and many other multiphase systems. Surface rheology is therefore relevant for a wide range of disciplines in the areas of physics, chemistry, engineering, biology, and medicine. Currently used descriptions of surface rheology have a number of limitations, and in particular are hard to generalize to the large deformation regime. Data are often analyzed with constitutive equations based on straightforward generalizations of models developed for describing bulk phase rheology. Since the latter are in general designed to describe incompressible materials, they are not guaranteed to describe highly compressible interfaces correctly. Here we discuss a unified approach to surface rheology based on nonequilibrium thermodynamics (NET) that provides a consistent set of balance and constitutive equations for the unambiguous determination of surface rheological parameters, both near and far beyond equilibrium. A closer integration of experimental surface rheology and multiphase nonequilibrium thermodynamics would clearly be beneficial for both disciplines.
topic surface rheology
fluid-fluid interface
nonequilibrium thermodynamics
url https://doi.org/10.3933/applrheol-20-24380
work_keys_str_mv AT sagisleonardmc rheologyofcomplexfluidfluidinterfacesaunifiedapproachbasedonnonequilibriumthermodynamics
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