Today, a 'rheometer' is a laboratory device used to measure the way in which a liquid, suspension or slurry flows in response to applied forces. It is used for those fluids which cannot be defined by a single value of
viscosity and therefore require more parameters to be set and measured than is the case for a
viscometer. It measures the
rheology of the fluid.
Meanings and origin
The word 'rheometer' comes from the Greek, and means a device for measuring flow. In the 19th century it was commonly used for devices to measure electric current, until the word was supplanted by
galvanometer and
ammeter. It was also used for the measurement of flow of liquids, in medical practice (flow of blood) and in civil engineering (flow of water). This latter use persisted to the second half of the 20th century in some areas. Following the coining of the term
rheology the word came to be applied to instruments for measuring the 'character' rather than 'quantity' of flow, and the other meanings are obsolete.
(Principal Source:
Oxford English Dictionary)
Function
In a rheometer a liquid is placed (usually at a controlled temperature, and sometimes at a controlled pressure) and 2 parameters are measured or set: the
shear stress, the
shear rate and the time. Typically the instrument will set either the shear stress or the shear rate and measure the other. If several data points are gathered, a plot can be made of these two quantities which is the
flow curve or
rheogram of the fluid. For liquids whose flow properties do not change with time, the flow curve is measured under equilibrium conditions. For liquids with elastic characteristics a time period may be imposed - usually by oscillation - to determine its magnitude.
Types of Rheometer
Pipe or Capillary
Liquid is forced through a tube of constant cross-section and precisely known dimensions under conditions of
laminar flow. Either the flow-rate or the pressure drop are fixed and the other measured. Knowing the dimensions, the flow-rate can be converted into a value for the
shear rate and the pressure drop into a value for the
shear stress. Varying the pressure or flow allows a flow curve to be determined.
Rotational cylinder
The liquid is placed within the
annulus of one cylinder inside another. One of the cylinders is rotated at a set speed. This determines the
shear rate inside the
annulus. The liquid tends to drag the other cylinder round, and the force it exerts on that cylinder (
torque) is measured, which can be converted to a
shear stress.
One version of this is the Fann V-G Viscometer, which runs at two speeds, (300 and 600 r.p.m.) and therefore only gives two points on the flow curve. This is sufficient to define a
Bingham plastic. It is widely used in the
oil industry for determining the flow character of
drilling fluids.
Other types measure at more speeds and enable an equilibrium
flow curve to be obtained.
Some models allow the speed to be continuously increased and decreased in a programmed fashion, which allows the measurement of time-dependent properties.
Cone and Plate
The liquid is placed on horizontal plate and a shallow cone placed into it. The angle between the surface of the cone and the plate is of the order of 1 degree - i.e. it is a very shallow cone. Typically the plate is rotated and the force on the cone measured. A well-known version of this instrument is the Weissenberg Rheogoniometer, in which the movement of the cone is resisted by a thin piece of metal which twists - known as a
torsion bar. The known response of the
torsion bar and the degree of twist give the
shear stress, while the rotational speed and cone dimensions give the
shear rate. In principle the Weissenberg Rheogoniometer is an absolute method of measurement providing it is accurately set up. Other instruments operating on this principle may be easier to use but require calibration with a known fluid.
Cone and plate rheometers can also be operated in an oscillating mode to measure elastic properties, or in combined rotational and oscillating modes.
Extensional
The liquid is placed between two solid surfaces which are pulled apart, drawing out a string of the liquid. Typically one is driven at a fixed speed and the force on the other measured. This is particularly used for polymer melts. Other systems involve liquid going through an orifice, expanding from a capillary, or sucked up from a surface into column by a vacuum.
Reference
K. Walters (1975) ''Rheometry'' (Chapman & Hall) ISBN 0412120909
Gallery
External Links
★
[1]- Physica Rheometer from Anton Paar
★
[2] - Thermo Fisher Scientific
★
[3] - Rheometer/Viscometer from RheoTec Messtechnik GmbH
★
[4] - A R Series Rheometer from T A instruments Inc
★
[5] - Malvern Instruments
★
[6] - DMA+ series from 01db-metravib