Non-colloidal suspensions undergoing dipolar interactions in an electric field have been extensively studied and are also known as smart materials as they share similarities with electrorheological (ER) fluids. Although the… Click to show full abstract
Non-colloidal suspensions undergoing dipolar interactions in an electric field have been extensively studied and are also known as smart materials as they share similarities with electrorheological (ER) fluids. Although the macroscopic responses are well-documented, the multiscale nature of such suspensions is still lacking. In this study, a large-scale Stokesian dynamics simulation is used to investigate the structural formation of such suspensions in an electric field up to highly concentrated regimes across different length scales: from particle-level (microscale) to particle cluster-level (mesoscale) and stress response-level (macroscale). It is observed that at a volume fraction of ϕ ≈ 30%, the steady-state structures are the most isotropic at the microscale, but at the macroscale, their normal stress fields are the most anisotropic. Interestingly, these structures are also the most heterogeneous at both the microscale and mesoscale. Furthermore, the effects of confinement on the multiscale responses are explored, revealing that there could be a strong link between the mesoscale and macroscale. This multiscale nature can offer the potential for precisely controlling or designing ER fluids in practical applications.
               
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