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  4. High Field MicroMRI Velocimetric Measurement of Quantitative Local Flow Curves
 
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High Field MicroMRI Velocimetric Measurement of Quantitative Local Flow Curves

Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2020-03-17
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Nikolaeva, Tatiana  
Vergeldt, Frank J.  
Serial, Maria Raquel  orcid-logo
Dijksman, Joshua A.  
Venema, Paul  
Voda, Adrian  
van Duynhoven, John P. M.  
Van As, Henk  
TORE-URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11420/9886
Journal
Analytical chemistry  
Volume
92
Issue
6
Start Page
4193
End Page
4200
Citation
Analytical Chemistry 92 (6): 4193-4200 (2020-03-17)
Publisher DOI
10.1021/acs.analchem.9b03216
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85081562858
PubMed ID
32052954
Performing rheo-microMRI velocimetry at a high magnetic field with strong pulsed field gradients has clear advantages in terms of (chemical) sensitivity and resolution in velocities, time, and space. To benefit from these advantages, some artifacts need to be minimized. Significant sources of such artifacts are chemical shift dispersion due to the high magnetic field, eddy currents caused by the pulsed magnetic field gradients, and possible mechanical instabilities in concentric cylinder (CC) rheo-cells. These, in particular, hamper quantitative assessment of spatially resolved velocity profiles needed to construct local flow curves (LFCs) in CC geometries with millimeter gap sizes. A major improvement was achieved by chemical shift selective suppression of signals that are spectroscopically different from the signal of interest. By also accounting for imperfections in pulsed field gradients, LFCs were obtained that were virtually free of artifacts. The approach to obtain quantitative LFCs in millimeter gap CC rheo-MRI cells was validated for Newtonian and simple yield stress fluids, which both showed quantitative agreement between local and global flow curves. No systematic effects of gap size and rotational velocity on the viscosity of a Newtonian fluid and yield stress of a complex fluid could be observed. The acquisition of LFCs during heterogeneous and transient flow of fat crystal dispersion demonstrated that local constitutive laws can be assessed by rheo-microMRI at a high magnetic field in a noninvasive, quantitative, and real-time manner.
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