Capillary suspensions are three-phase mixtures containing a solid particulate phase, a continuous liquid phase, and a second immiscible liquid forming capillary bridges between particles. Capillary suspensions are encountered in a wide array of applications including 3D printing, porous materials, and food formulations, but despite recent progress, the micromechanics of particle clusters in flow is not fully understood. In this work, we study the dynamics of meniscus-bound particle clusters in planar extensional flow using a Stokes trap, which is an automated flow control technique that allows for precise manipulation of freely suspended particles or particle clusters in flow. Focusing on the case of a two-particle doublet, we use a combination of experiments and analytical modeling to understand how particle clusters rearrange, deform, and ultimately break up in extensional flow. The time required for cluster breakup is quantified as a function of capillary number Ca and meniscus volume V. Importantly, a critical capillary number Cacrit for cluster breakup is determined using a combination of experiments and modeling. Cluster relaxation experiments are also performed by deforming particle clusters in flow, followed by flow cessation prior to breakup and observing cluster relaxation dynamics under zero-flow conditions. In all cases, experiments are complemented by an analytical model that accounts for capillary forces, lubrication forces, hydrodynamic drag forces, and hydrodynamic interactions acting on the particles. Results from the analytical models are found to be in good agreement with experiments. Overall, this work provides a new quantitative understanding of the deformation dynamics of capillary clusters in extensional flow.
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Many “metallized plastic” packaging films bend if stretched and released. Such behavior can be reproduced in laminate composites prepared by bonding aluminum foil to an adhesive polymer sheet. It is shown that such bending occurs because stretching deforms the aluminum layer permanently (i.e., plastically), whereas the polymer layer deforms elastically. Upon releasing, the aluminum–polymer composite then resolves the strain mismatch by bending, with the aluminum on the convex side of the bend. The curvature is found to increase linearly with the applied strain and to reduce as the aluminum thickness increases. The theory of fully elastic bilayers with strain mismatch is in qualitative agreement with the results, but underpredicts the curvatures. It is shown how such bilayers can be patterned with defects such as holes or slits to realize more complex shape morphing, and also how one may achieve bidirectional bending. Such aluminum–polymer‐layered composites provide an inexpensive platform suitable for rapid prototyping of self‐folding origami structures using robust materials.
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Wrinkling is a ubiquitous surface phenomenon in many biological tissues and is believed to play an important role in arterial health. As arteries are highly nonlinear, anisotropic, multilayered composite systems, it is necessary to investigate wrinkling incorporating these material characteristics. Several studies have examined surface wrinkling mechanisms with nonlinear isotropic material relationships. Nevertheless, wrinkling associated with anisotropic constitutive models such as Ogden–Gasser–Holzapfel (OGH), which is suitable for soft biological tissues, and in particular arteries, still requires investigation. Here, the effects of OGH parameters such as fibers’ orientation, stiffness, and dispersion on the onset of wrinkling, wrinkle wavelength and amplitude are elucidated through analysis of a bilayer system composed of a thin, stiff neo-Hookean membrane and a soft OGH substrate subjected to compression. Critical contractile strain at which wrinkles occur is predicted using both finite element analysis and analytical linear perturbation approach. Results suggest that besides stiffness mismatch, anisotropic features associated with fiber stiffness and distribution might be used in natural layered systems to adjust wrinkling and subsequent folding behaviors. Further analysis of a bilayer system with fibers in the (x–y) plane subjected to compression in the x direction shows a complex dependence of wrinkling strain and wavelength on fiber angle, stiffness, and dispersion. This behavior is captured by an approximation utilizing the linearized anisotropic properties derived from OGH model. Such understanding of wrinkling in this artery wall-like system will help identify the role of wrinkling mechanisms in biological artery in addition to the design of its synthetic counterparts.more » « less