화학공학소재연구정보센터
Rheologica Acta, Vol.54, No.8, 667-677, 2015
Linear viscoelastic fluid characterization of ultra-high-viscosity fluids for high-frequency damper design
This paper presents the use of a state of the art damper for high-precision motion stages as a sliding plate rheometer for measuring linear viscoelastic properties in the frequency range of 10 Hz-10 kHz. This device is relatively cheap and enables to obtain linear viscoelastic (LVE) fluid models for practical use in precision mechanics applications. This is an example of reversed engineering, i.e., turning a machine part into a material characterization device. Results are shown for a high-viscosity fluid. The first part of this paper describes the damper design that is based on a high-viscosity fluid. This design is flexure-based to minimize parasitic nonlinear forces such as hysteresis and stick-slip. In the second part of the paper, LVE fluid characterization by means of the damper setup is presented. Measurements are performed and model parameters are fitted by a non-convex optimization algorithm in order to obtain the frequency-dependent behavior of the fluid. The resulting fluid model is validated by comparison with a second measurement with a different damper geometry. This paper shows that LVE fluid characterization between 10 Hz and 10 kHz for elastic high-viscosity fluids is possible with a motion stage damper for which the undamped behavior is known.