English

Viscoelastic Phase Separation in Shear Flow

Soft Condensed Matter 2009-11-10 v3 Statistical Mechanics

Abstract

We numerically investigate viscoelastic phase separation in polymer solutions under shear using a time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau model. The gross variables in our model are the polymer volume fraction and a conformation tensor. The latter represents chain deformations and relaxes slowly on the rheological time giving rise to a large viscoelastic stress. The polymer and the solvent obey two-fluid dynamics in which the viscoelastic stress acts asymmetrically on the polymer and, as a result, the stress and the diffusion are dynamically coupled. Below the coexistence curve, interfaces appear with increasing the quench depth and the solvent regions act as a lubricant. In these cases the composition heterogeneity causes more enhanced viscoelastic heterogeneity and the macroscopic stress is decreased at fixed applied shear rate. We find steady two-phase states composed of the polymer-rich and solvent-rich regions, where the characteristic domain size is inversely proportional to the average shear stress for various shear rates. The deviatoric stress components exhibit large temporal fluctuations. The normal stress difference can take negative values transiently at weak shear.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.cond-mat/0309218,
  title  = {Viscoelastic Phase Separation in Shear Flow},
  author = {Tatsuhiro Imaeda and Akira Furukawa and Akira Onuki},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:cond-mat/0309218},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

16pages, 16figures, to be published in Phys.Rev.E