Colloidal Stability and Magnetic Field-Induced Ordering of Magnetorheological Fluids Studied with a Quartz Crystal Microbalance
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Rodríguez López, Jaime; Villar Castro, Pedro; Vicente Álvarez-Manzaneda, Juan De; Johannsmann, Diethelm; Elvira, Luis; Morillas Medina, José Rafael; Montero de Espinosa, FranciscoEditorial
MDPI
Materia
TSM resonator Magnetorheological fluid QCM
Date
2015-12-15Referencia bibliográfica
Rodriguez López. J. et. al. Sensors 2015, 15, 30443–30456. [https://doi.org/10.3390/s151229808]
Patrocinador
Projects DPI2013-46915-C2-1-R and MINECO MAT 2013-44429-R and PCIN-2015-051 (Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad); Junta de Andalucía P10-RNM-6630 and P11-FQM-7074 projects (Spain); FPU14/ 01576 fellowshipRésumé
This work proposes the use of quartz crystal microbalances (QCMs) as a method to
analyze and characterize magnetorheological (MR) fluids. QCM devices are sensitive to changes
in mass, surface interactions, and viscoelastic properties of the medium contacting its surface. These
features make the QCM suitable to study MR fluids and their response to variable environmental
conditions. MR fluids change their structure and viscoelastic properties under the action of an
external magnetic field, this change being determined by the particle volume fraction, the magnetic
field strength, and the presence of thixotropic agents among other factors. In this work, the
measurement of the resonance parameters (resonance frequency and dissipation factor) of a QCM
are used to analyze the behavior of MR fluids in static conditions (that is, in the absence of external
mechanical stresses). The influence of sedimentation under gravity and the application of magnetic
fields on the shifts of resonance frequency and dissipation factor were measured and discussed in
the frame of the coupled resonance produced by particles touching the QCM surface. Furthermore,
the MR-fluid/QCM system has a great potential for the study of high-frequency contact mechanics
because the translational and rotational stiffness of the link between the surface and the particles
can be tuned by the magnetic field.