Rheological properties of suspensions of the green microalga Chlorella vulgaris at various volume fractions

A systematic study of the rheological properties of solutions of non-motile microalgae ( Chlorella vulgaris CCAP 211-19) in a wide range of volume fractions is presented. As the volume fraction is gradually increased, several rheological regimes are observed. At low volume fractions (but yet beyond...

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Published inRheologica acta Vol. 52; no. 6; pp. 589 - 605
Main Authors Souliès, Antoine, Pruvost, Jeremy, Legrand, Jack, Castelain, Cathy, Burghelea, Teodor I.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Berlin/Heidelberg Springer-Verlag 01.06.2013
Springer Nature B.V
Springer Verlag
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Summary:A systematic study of the rheological properties of solutions of non-motile microalgae ( Chlorella vulgaris CCAP 211-19) in a wide range of volume fractions is presented. As the volume fraction is gradually increased, several rheological regimes are observed. At low volume fractions (but yet beyond the Einstein diluted limit), the suspensions display a Newtonian rheological behaviour and the volume fraction dependence of the viscosity can be well described by the Quemada model (Quemada, Eur Phys J Appl Phys 1:119–127, 1997 ). For intermediate values of the volume fraction, a shear thinning behaviour is observed and the volume fraction dependence of the viscosity can be described by the Simha model (Simha, J Appl Phys 23:1020–1024, 1952 ). For the largest values of the volume fraction investigated, an apparent yield stress behaviour is observed. Increasing and decreasing stress ramps within this range of volume fractions indicate a thixotropic behaviour as well. The rheological behaviour observed within the high concentration regime bears similarities with the measurements performed by Heymann and Aksel (Phys Rev E 75:021505, 2007 ) on polymethyl methacrylate suspensions: irreversible flow behaviour (upon increasing/decreasing stresses) and dependence of the flow curve on the characteristic time of forcing (the averaging time per stress values). All these findings indicate a behaviour of the microalgae suspensions similar to that of suspensions of rigid particles. A deeper insight into the physical mechanisms underlying the shear thinning and the apparent yield stress regime is obtained by an in situ analysis of the microscopic flow of the suspension under shear. The shear thinning regime is associated to the formation of cell aggregates (flocs). Based on the Voronoi analysis of the correlation between the cell distribution and cell sizes, we suggest that the repulsive electrostatic interactions are responsible for this microscale organisation. The apparent yield stress regime originates in the formation of large-scale cell aggregates which behave as rigid plugs leading to a maximally random jammed state .
ISSN:0035-4511
1435-1528
DOI:10.1007/s00397-013-0700-z