50% found this document useful (2 votes)
4K views2 pages

Principles of Viscosity Measurement

Viscosity is a measure of a fluid's resistance to flow and deformation under stress. For Newtonian fluids, viscosity depends only on temperature and pressure, but non-Newtonian fluids exhibit variable viscosity depending on shear rate. Viscosity can be measured using simple flow cups, which time how long it takes a fixed volume of fluid to pass through an orifice, or more complex rotational viscometers, which measure viscosity under varying shear rates. Common types of non-Newtonian fluids include pseudoplastics, whose viscosity decreases with increasing shear rate, and dilatants, whose viscosity increases under shear.

Uploaded by

Pedro Sanchez
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
50% found this document useful (2 votes)
4K views2 pages

Principles of Viscosity Measurement

Viscosity is a measure of a fluid's resistance to flow and deformation under stress. For Newtonian fluids, viscosity depends only on temperature and pressure, but non-Newtonian fluids exhibit variable viscosity depending on shear rate. Viscosity can be measured using simple flow cups, which time how long it takes a fixed volume of fluid to pass through an orifice, or more complex rotational viscometers, which measure viscosity under varying shear rates. Common types of non-Newtonian fluids include pseudoplastics, whose viscosity decreases with increasing shear rate, and dilatants, whose viscosity increases under shear.

Uploaded by

Pedro Sanchez
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 2

Introduction

Viscosity is a measure of the resistance of a fluid to deform under shear stress. It is commonly perceived as flow behaviour or resistance to pouring. Viscosity describes a fluids internal resistance to flow and may be thought of as a measure of fluid friction. Viscosity at final plays a key role in th processing stage! For certain liquids viscosity is a material constant that only depends on temperature and pressure. This group of materials is termed Newtonian liquids.

Appearance Color

Newtonian

Liquids which do not follow this proportional ratio are called nonNewtonian.

Physical Properties Viscosity

In practice, time-dependent viscosity is called thixotropy. If a liquid is sheared at a constant velocity gradient, viscosity will slowly decrease. As soon as the shear forces are removed, viscosity will recover and return to the initial value.
Thixotropy
shear stress viscosity

Viscosity
Velocity

Velocity

The viscosity of pseudoplastic materials will decrease with an increasing shear rate (shear thinning).
shear stress

Technical Service

Pseudoplastic (ShearThinning)

Velocity

viscosity

Velocity

Index

BYK-Gardner GmbH Lausitzer Strasse 8 82538 Geretsried Germany Tel +49 8171 3493-0 Fax +49 8171 3493-140

241

The viscosity of dilatant products, however, will increase when shear forces are applied.
Dilatant (Shear-Thickening)

Dip Cups
These cups are designed for quick and approximate determination of efflux times for paints and similar fluids at paint manufacturers and paint user sites.

This behavior is known as shear thickening. When shear forces are applied, the liquid becomes more viscous.

Viscosity Measurement
In the paint industry a number of measurement methods, from simple flow cup to computer controlled rotation viscometers, have been established for the determination of viscosity. BYK-Gardner offers a complete line of viscosity measurement instrumentation.

Dip Cups

Flow Cups

Bubble Viscometers
The Alphabetical Comparison Method uses 4 sets of lettered reference tubes, A5 through Z10, of known viscosity to cover a viscosity range from 0.005 to 1,000 stokes. The Direct Time Method uses a single 3-line timer tube for determining the bubble seconds required for an air bubble to travel a known vertical distance through a bore of known diameter. These bubble seconds may then be converted to stokes.

Flow Cups
For many applications it is not necessary to know the absolute viscosity of a paint system. A parameter permitting a relative classification and estimation is often sufficient. The efflux time, measured in seconds, has proven to be a practical measure. It is determined using flow cups of various designs following the appropriate international / national standards. These cups hold a defined volume of liquid which flows through an orifice. The reproducibility of such measurements depends on The accuracy of the size of the cup A constant temperature during measurement The Newtonian flow behaviour of the liquid

Rotational Viscometers
Various rotational viscometers are in use for the determination of the viscosity of non-Newtonian liquids. These types of material exhibit different viscosities depending on the applied shear rate. BYK-Gardner offers a complete line of viscometers for any application: Stormer Viscometer, Cone and Plate Viscometer as well as Brookfield Viscometers with different cylinders, tubes and other measuring accessories.

Both methods are subject to variations traceable to the following variables: Temperature: 1 C = 10% error Vertical Control 5 C slant = 10% error Tube I.D. Control 0.1 mm = 2% error

242

BYK-Gardner GmbH Lausitzer Strasse 8 82538 Geretsried Germany Tel +49 8171 3493-0 Fax +49 8171 3493-140

You might also like