2021
DOI: 10.1021/acsaelm.1c00070
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Effect of Particle Shape Anisotropy on the Performance and Stability of Magnetorheological Fluids

Abstract: The effect of shape anisotropy of a magnetic particle on the performance and stability of the magnetorheological (MR) suspension was investigated using a rotational rheometer and a vibrating sample magnetometer. A flaky Sendust (FS) suspension demonstrated surprisingly high MR performance at low magnetic field strength because of the shape anisotropy effect which induced a rapid ascent of the particles' magnetic moment and, thus, suspension's high yield stress. Despite its lower iron content (85%) than carbony… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…The apparent viscosity η is the ratio between the shear stress ( τ ) and the shear rate ( γ ), equal to τ / γ , which is proportional to the inverse of the Mason number (Mn −1 ). [ 21,22 ] The Mason number (equivalent to γ̇${\mathrm{\dot{\gamma }}}$/M 2 , where M is the magnetic field strength; see Supporting Information for more details) is then an independent variable that collapses the experimental data collected at various magnetic field strengths and shear rates onto a single master curve (Figure 6b). [ 42,43 ] Under a fixed particle concentration, the master curve for the specific viscosity (i.e., the ratio of the apparent viscosity and the medium viscosity) and the volume fraction correction versus γ̇$\dot{\gamma }$/ μ 2 at different magnetic field strengths can be obtained.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The apparent viscosity η is the ratio between the shear stress ( τ ) and the shear rate ( γ ), equal to τ / γ , which is proportional to the inverse of the Mason number (Mn −1 ). [ 21,22 ] The Mason number (equivalent to γ̇${\mathrm{\dot{\gamma }}}$/M 2 , where M is the magnetic field strength; see Supporting Information for more details) is then an independent variable that collapses the experimental data collected at various magnetic field strengths and shear rates onto a single master curve (Figure 6b). [ 42,43 ] Under a fixed particle concentration, the master curve for the specific viscosity (i.e., the ratio of the apparent viscosity and the medium viscosity) and the volume fraction correction versus γ̇$\dot{\gamma }$/ μ 2 at different magnetic field strengths can be obtained.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[ 42,43 ] Under a fixed particle concentration, the master curve for the specific viscosity (i.e., the ratio of the apparent viscosity and the medium viscosity) and the volume fraction correction versus γ̇$\dot{\gamma }$/ μ 2 at different magnetic field strengths can be obtained. [ 22–24 ] The behaviors of different MR fluids are compared for pure CI, 95% CI, and 90% CI fluids at two different magnetic field strengths, as shown in Figure 6b. All six curves overlap well with each other, which means the behaviors of the three fluids were the same because they followed the same scaling law ( Figure a) and therefore the same particle magnetization model.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…, silicon oil and hydrocarbon oil) that can control their magnetorheological properties by an external magnetic field. 19,20 For most MR fluids, when an external magnetic field is applied, the particles are magnetized along the field direction and induced their aggregation to form chain-like structures, resulting in an increase of viscosity. While they will become random once the external magnetic field strength is removed.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the present work, attention is paid to the problem of limiting stresses. The main factors that affect the ability to achieve a suitable value of this parameter are the magnetic field strength acting on the fluid and the composition of the MR fluid, especially the quantity, size and magnetic parameters of the ferromagnetic particles used to prepare the suspension [5,[22][23][24][25][26].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%