DILATANT - traducción al árabe
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DILATANT - traducción al árabe

TYPE OF FLUIDS
Dilatant compound; Shear thickening fluid; Shear thickening; Liquid armor; Liquid body armor; Shear thickening fluids; Shear-thickening fluid; Shear Thickening Fluids
  • Particle in solution stabilized via the electrostatic double-layer force
  • Energy of repulsion as a function of particle separation
  • Transient hydroclustering of particles in a solution.
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  • Particle in suspension stabilized via steric hindrance.

DILATANT         

ألاسم

اِتِّساع ; اِسْتِطَالَة ; اِنْبِسَاط ; تَمَدُّد ; تَوَسُّع ; تَوْسِعَة

dilatant         
‎ مُوَسِّع‎
dilatant         
مُوَسِّع

Wikipedia

Dilatant

A dilatant (, ) (also termed shear thickening) material is one in which viscosity increases with the rate of shear strain. Such a shear thickening fluid, also known by the initialism STF, is an example of a non-Newtonian fluid. This behaviour is usually not observed in pure materials, but can occur in suspensions.

A dilatant is a non-Newtonian fluid where the shear viscosity increases with applied shear stress. This behavior is only one type of deviation from Newton’s Law, and it is controlled by such factors as particle size, shape, and distribution. The properties of these suspensions depend on Hamaker theory and Van der Waals forces and can be stabilized electrostatically or sterically. Shear thickening behavior occurs when a colloidal suspension transitions from a stable state to a state of flocculation. A large portion of the properties of these systems are due to the surface chemistry of particles in dispersion, known as colloids.

This can readily be seen with a mixture of cornstarch and water (sometimes called oobleck), which acts in counterintuitive ways when struck or thrown against a surface. Sand that is completely soaked with water also behaves as a dilatant material. This is the reason why when walking on wet sand, a dry area appears directly underfoot.

Rheopecty is a similar property in which viscosity increases with cumulative stress or agitation over time. The opposite of a dilatant material is a pseudoplastic.