Velocity fluctuations of fracturelike disruptions of associating polymer solutions

Publication date

2011-07-07T12:55:07Z

2011-07-07T12:55:07Z

1995

Abstract

Velocity has been measured as a function of time for propagating crack tips as water is injected into solutions of end-capped associating polymers in a rectanguar Hele-Shaw cell. Measurements were performed for flows with different values of cell gap, channel width, polymer molecular weight, and polymer concentration. The condition for the onset of fracturelike behavior is well described by a Deborah number which uses the shear-thinning shear rate of the polymer solution as a characteristic frequency for network relaxation. At low molecular weight, the onset of fracturelike pattern evolution is accompanied by an abrupt jump in tip velocity, followed by a lower and approximately constant acceleration. At high molecular weight, the transition to fracturelike behavior involves passing through a regime that may be understood in terms of stick-slip dynamics. The crack-tip wanders from side to side and fluctuates (in both speed and velocity along the channel) with a characteristic frequency which depends linearly on the invading fluid injection rate.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

The American Physical Society

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.51.1338

Physical Review E, 1995, vol. 51, núm. 2, p. 1338-1343

http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.51.1338

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(c) American Physical Society, 1995

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