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SHERE Current Status
- Aug 16, 2008 and Aug.
18, 2008: Additional
test points will be
conducted during SHERE operations planned as Voluntary Science.
- Aug 9,
2008: Test points #15, #25 and #1 were successfully completed.
- Aug
7, 2008: Test points #23 and #5 were successfully completed.
- Aug
2, 2008: First two planned test points (#3 and #13) were
successfully completed. The test points are ordered to optimize
the
shear (rotation) and elongation (stretch) rates that the fluid sees,
with the first 9 test points designed to provide minimum success
for the
SHERE project.
- July 26, 2008: A Dry Run Test was completed
by astronaut Greg
Chamitoff. This test is used to perform a functional test of the
SHERE
hardware using a "dry" fluid module. It also allowed Greg
a chance to
go through the procedures and practice using tools needed specifically
to install, deploy and remove a fluid module during science testing.
- July
20, 2008: Check-out of several hardware components, such as the
force transducer, laser micrometer and SHERE camera, on the flight
hardware was successfully performed by astronaut Greg Chamitoff.
- June 29, 2008: The SHERE Hardware
(Interface Box, Rheometer, Camera Arm, Keyboard, Toolbox and cable
assemblies) was successfully set-up in the Microgravity Science
Glovebox by astronaut Greg Chamitoff. SHERE Software Load was
also performed.
- March 11, 2008: The
Fluid Modules (consisting of 20 filled Fluid Modules and one "dry" Fluid
Module) were launched on the STS 123/Endeavour (Flight 1J/A).
- October 23, 2007: The Main Hardware (Rheometer,
Interface Box, Toolbox, Keyboard, Camera Arm and cable assemblies)
was launched inside the Harmony Module on the STS-120/Discovery.
Background
The
resistance of a fluid to an imposed flow is termed ‘viscosity’,
and it is a fundamental material parameter by which manufacturers
and end-users characterize a material. Normally, researchers place
a material in a commercial instrument that imposes a simple rotational
shearing flow and obtains a rate-dependent shear viscosity. While
this level of characterization is sufficient for some processes,
in typical industrial polymer processing operations the material
experiences a complex flow history with both shear and extensional
characteristics. For example, in fiber spinning, the fluid experiences
a complex rotational shear flow as it flows through the spinneret
head before entering a region of dominant axial elongation in the
spinline.
Polymer behavior under these conditions is process-dependent
and stems from their long chain structure. Polymers are typically
hydrocarbon-based molecules composed of repeated molecular units
and can contain hundreds to tens of thousands of these repeat units.
The resulting long molecular chain is usually very flexible, allowing
the polymer to coil, extend, and entangle with neighboring polymer
chains. In its rest state, a typical polymer chain will assume a
random coiled configuration. When exposed to a rotational shearing
flow, this coil will align 45o to the flow direction and flip over
and over again to coil the polymer chain. When exposed to an extensional
flow, the coil extends axially and can be pulled taut if the flow
is strong enough. Because polymers act like springs, more stress
is required to stretch them to higher strains. This relationship
between stress and extensional deformation rate (i.e., strain rate)
is expressed as an extensional viscosity and is a fundamental material
parameter independent of shear viscosity.
SCIENCE OVERVIEW
Due
to the coiling effect of rotational shear flow on the polymer chains,
shearing on the fluid immediately before extension will have an
effect on the extensional behavior of the fluid. Therefore,
the main objective of SHERE is to study the effect of rotational
preshear on the extensional behavior of the fluid. Of specific
interest is the transient evolution of the microstructure and
viscoelastic tensile stresses that are present during the extension
of the fluid.
The combination of both shearing and extensional flows
is common in many polymer-processing operations such as extrusion,
blow-molding and fiber spinning. Therefore, knowledge of the complete
rheological properties of the polymer fluid is required in order to
accurately predict and account for its flow behavior. In addition,
if numerical simulations are to serve as a priori design tools
for optimizing polymer processing operations, then it is critical
to have an accurate knowledge of the extensional viscosity and its
variation with temperature, concentration, molecular weight, and strain
rate.
Unlike common Newtonian fluids, complex fluids such as polymers
cannot be characterized by a single material parameter such as the
Newtonian (shear) viscosity. Instead, they exhibit nonlinear responses
to imposed deformations. The extensional function of non-Newtonian
fluids is not constant but depends on both the rate of deformation
and the total strain experienced by a fluid element.
A class of dilute
polymer solutions, collectively referred to as ‘Boger
fluids,’ has become a popular choice for rheological studies
of non-Newtonian fluids and will be used in this experiment. These
ideal elastic fluids exhibit a nearly constant shear viscosity,
which allows a direct comparison of Boger fluids with Newtonian
fluids having similar viscosities. The high viscosity of the suspending
solvent results in long relaxation times and substantial normal
stresses, and the low concentration of high molecular weight polymers
facilitates modeling analysis.
Experiment Operations
SHERE
is designed to fly in the Microgravity Science Glovebox (MSG) on
the International Space Station (ISS). The main SHERE hardware consists
of the interface box, rheometer, camera arm, cabling, keyboard, and tool box as shown in
Figure 1. In addition, there are 25
fluid modules in a stowage tray (not shown). The interface box contains
all power distribution, controllers, and data acquisition and storage.
It also contains the video system that combines the camera view and
data display onto one video signal for recording and downlink. The
rheometer (see Figure 2) contains the rotational preshear motor, translation
slider, sensitive force transducer, electroluminescent backlight panel,
laser micrometer, and thermistors. During testing it will also contain
one of the 25 fluid modules. The camera arm attaches to rheometer
for video recording of the stretched fluid’s shape. The tool
box contains miscellaneous tools used during setup and operation of
the experiment. The keyboard is used to control the experiment with
the help of the MSG video monitor. The 25 fluid modules contain the
fluid that will be sheared and stretched during the course of the
experiment. Each fluid module contains prepackaged Boger fluid, and
all samples are identical.
The fluid modules are stored at 20 oC at
least 24 hours prior to testing. After the hardware is installed in
the MSG, the experiment goes through a set of initial check-out and
calibration procedures. Once these procedures are complete, one fluid
module is installed in the rheometer, the outside shells of the fluid
module are removed and the inner shroud is slid back to expose the
Boger fluid. The preshear motor is then rotated at a slow 100 rpm,
and a stable fluid column is verified. Horizontal and vertical position
controls are available as necessary to achieve a stable column. A
test point is then selected (preshear and strain rates), and the experiment
automatically executes. The fluid is presheared and stretched according
to a preprogrammed exponential velocity profile. The stretch is stopped
abruptly at 194 mm in length, and the fluid is allowed to relax. Each
experiment lasts approximately five minutes, most of which is spent
waiting for the fluid column to drain to the end plates and break
in the middle. See Figure 2 – SHERE Rheometer
Afterwards, the translation slider is repositioned to
the starting position, and the fluid column is recombined. If it is
reusable due to criteria based on temperature, bubble contamination,
and previous strain encountered, then another test can be performed
with the same fluid module. Otherwise, it is removed, and the next
one is installed for the next test.
Measurements
During each experiment,
a smooth, bubble-free cylindrical liquid bridge is generated between
two flat endplates. The liquid bridge will initially be 5 mm long
and 10 mm in diameter. A rotational shear rate will be imposed on
the fluid by rotating one endplate from 0 to 500 rpm for a predetermined
time while holding the other endplate stationary. As soon as the rotation
has stopped, an elongational deformation will be imposed by axially
translating one of the endplates in an exponential manner in order
to generate constant strain rates from 0.1 to 5.0 s-1. The tensile
force and filament shape will be monitored during the elongation,
and the elongation will stop at a length of approximately 194 mm.
The position of the moving plate is recorded to verify the imposed
velocity profile. By backlighting the test fluid with an electroluminescent
panel and viewing the fluid column from above with a video camera,
half of the fluid column’s
shape can be recorded for use in later analyses and simulations.
Additionally, the fluid diameter is recorded via a laser micrometer
at the column’s midpoint. Fluid and air temperatures are digitally
recorded from thermistors. Once the elongated bridge has been allowed
to stabilize, the experiment will monitor subsequent evolution of
the midpoint radius, filament shape, and tensile force in the column.
Eventually, the filament necks down and breaks under the combined
action of elastic and viscous capillary stresses. From measurements
of force and radius during the stretch and relaxation of the fluid,
we can compute the extensional viscosity as a function of strain
rate and a function of the amount of preshearing. |
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Figure 1.
SHERE Flight Hardware |
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Figure 2.
SHERE Rheometer |
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