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  2. Bingham plastic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bingham_plastic

    Figure 1. Bingham Plastic flow as described by Bingham. Figure 1 shows a graph of the behaviour of an ordinary viscous (or Newtonian) fluid in red, for example in a pipe. If the pressure at one end of a pipe is increased this produces a stress on the fluid tending to make it move (called the shear stress) and the volumetric flow rate increases proportionally.

  3. Shear thinning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shear_thinning

    Shear thinning in a polymeric system: dependence of apparent viscosity on shear rate. η 0 is the zero shear rate viscosity and η ∞ is the infinite shear viscosity plateau. At both sufficiently high and very low shear rates, viscosity of a polymer system is independent of the shear rate.

  4. Bingham-Papanastasiou model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bingham-papanastasiou_model

    Viscoplastic materials can be well approximated uniformly at all levels of stress as liquids that exhibit infinitely high viscosity in the limit of low shear rates followed by a continuous transition to a viscous liquid.

  5. Properties of concrete - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Properties_of_concrete

    Concrete has a very low coefficient of thermal expansion, and as it matures concrete shrinks. All concrete structures will crack to some extent, due to shrinkage and tension. Concrete which is subjected to long-duration forces is prone to creep. The density of concrete varies, but is around 2,400 kilograms per cubic metre (150 lb/cu ft). [1]

  6. Viscoplasticity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viscoplasticity

    An alternative approach is to add a strain rate dependence to the yield stress and use the techniques of rate independent plasticity to calculate the response of a material. [ 4 ] For metals and alloys , viscoplasticity is the macroscopic behavior caused by a mechanism linked to the movement of dislocations in grains , with superposed effects ...

  7. Viscosity models for mixtures - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viscosity_models_for_mixtures

    The dilute gas viscosity contribution to the total viscosity of a fluid will only be important when predicting the viscosity of vapors at low pressures or the viscosity of dense fluids at high temperatures. The viscosity model for dilute gas, that is shown above, is widely used throughout the industry and applied science communities.

  8. Power-law fluid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power-law_fluid

    For example, if n were less than one, the power law predicts that the effective viscosity would decrease with increasing shear rate indefinitely, requiring a fluid with infinite viscosity at rest and zero viscosity as the shear rate approaches infinity, but a real fluid has both a minimum and a maximum effective viscosity that depend on the ...

  9. Marsh funnel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marsh_funnel

    However the effective viscosity can be determined from following simple formula. [4] μ = ρ (t - 25) where μ = effective viscosity in centipoise ρ = density in g/cm 3 t = quart funnel time in seconds For example, a mud of funnel time 40 seconds and density 1.1 g/cm 3 has an effective viscosity of about 16.5