Graph explorer

Viscoelastic levitation

The effects of viscoelasticity have been shown to manifest themselves via symmetry breaking. In this investigation, we show a novel phenomenon that arises from this idea. We observe that when a dense sphere is rotated near a wall (the rotation being aligned with the wall-normal direction and gravity), it levitates to a fixed distance away from the wall. Since the shear is larger in the gap (between the sphere and the wall) than in the open side of the sphere, the shear-induced elastic stresses are thus asymmetric, resulting in a net elastic vertical force that balances the weight of the sphere. We conduct experiments, theoretic models, and numerical simulations for rotating spheres of various sizes and densities in a Boger-type fluid. In the small Deborah number range, the results are collapsed into a universal trend by considering a dimensionless group of the ratio of elastic to gravitational forces.

7 nodes6 linksoverview previewViscoelastic levitation
7 nodes6 links
Viscoelastic levitation7 visible / 7 total nodes / 16 links
Co-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipAuthorshipAuthorshipAuthorshipAuthorshipTopic signalAuthorshipWViscoelastic levitationpreprint / 2022AYunxing SuResearcherAAlfonso CastilloResearcherAOn Shun PakResearcherALailai ZhuResearcherTphysics.flu-dyn4653 worksARoberto ZenitResearcher
PaperSignal 106 links

Viscoelastic levitation

preprint / 2022

Open