4.8 Article

Capillary Flow-MRI: Quantifying Micron-Scale Cooperativity in Complex Dispersions

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 95, Issue 41, Pages 15162-15170

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.3c01108

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A pressure-driven high-field MRI velocimetry platform was developed to accurately predict cooperative flow in strongly confined flow. Experimental observations showed that the cooperative flow of Carbopol in a 100 μm capillary was independent of flow conditions, while the cooperative flow of heterogeneous fat crystal dispersion (FCD) increased with gap size and applied pressure.
Strongly confined flow of particulate fluids is encoun-tered in applications ranging from three-dimensional (3D) printing to the spreading of foods and cosmetics into thin layers. When flowing in constrictions with gap sizes, w, within 10(2) times the mean size of particles or aggregates, d, structured fluids experience enhanced bulk velocities and inhomogeneous viscosities, as a result of so-called cooperative, or nonlocal, particle interactions. Correctly predicting cooperative flow for a wide range of complex fluids requires high-resolution flow imaging modalities applicable in situ to even optically opaque fluids. To this goal, we here developed a pressure-driven high-field magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) velocimetry platform, comprising a pressure controller connected to a capillary. Wall properties and diameter could be modified respectively as hydro-phobic/hydrophilic, or within w similar to 100-540 mu m. By achieving a high spatial resolution of 9 mu m, flow cooperativity length scales, xi, down to 15 mu m in Carbopol with d similar to 2 mu m could be quantified by means of established physical models with an accuracy of 13%. The same approach was adopted for a heterogeneous fat crystal dispersion (FCD) with d and xi values up to an order of magnitude higher than those for Carbopol. We found that for strongly confined flow of Carbopol in the 100 mu m capillary, xi is independent of flow conditions. For the FCD, xi increases with gap size and applied pressures over 0.25-1 bar. In both samples, nonlocal interactions span domains up to about 5-8 particles but, at the highest confinement degree explored, similar to 8% for FCD, domains of only similar to 2 particles contribute to cooperative flow. The developed flow-MRI platform is easily scalable to ultrahigh field MRI conditions for chemically resolved velocimetric measurements of, e.g., complex fluids with anisotropic particles undergoing alignment. Future potential applications of the platform encompass imaging extrusion under confinement during the 3D printing of complex dispersions or in in vitro vascular and perfusion studies.

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