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Solution Viscoelastic Properties of OATRIM‐10 and Cooked Oat Bran
Author(s) -
Carriere C. J.,
Inglett G. E.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
cereal chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.558
H-Index - 100
eISSN - 1943-3638
pISSN - 0009-0352
DOI - 10.1094/cchem.1998.75.3.354
Subject(s) - thixotropy , shear (geology) , viscoelasticity , chemistry , rheology , shear rate , shear thinning , dilatant , shear modulus , composite material , materials science
The solution rheological behaviors of OATRIM‐10 and cooked oat bran were investigated. The rheological properties of the materials were investigated using both thixotropic loop and small‐amplitude oscillatory shear experiments. The cooked oat bran exhibited shear‐thinning behavior during a thixotropic loop experiment over a shear rate range of 0–250/sec. The shear‐thinning behavior was reproduced during the measurement of a second thixotropic loop. In contrast, OATRIM‐10 exhibited an unexpected region of shear‐thickening behavior at 20–80/sec. The shear‐thickening and subsequent shear‐thinning regions for OATRIM‐10 could be described by a transient network model indicating that the shear‐thickening behavior is caused by a shear‐induced entangled network that is partially disentangled at higher shear rates. Subsequent thixotropic loop experiments displayed the shear‐thickening region for OATRIM‐10, indicating that the network structure can be reformed during the imposition of a shear field. Small‐amplitude oscillatory shear data for cooked oat bran can be described reasonably well using a generalized linear viscoelastic (GLV) model. The oscillatory shear data obtained for OATRIM‐10 could not be described by the GLV model. OATRIM‐10 exhibited a distinctive plateau centered at 10/sec, and the low frequency response of storage modulus G ′ decreased with a much larger slope in frequency than was predicted by the GLV model.