Natural Sciences
Physics
Plasma & Fluid Physics
ElementScope CategorySub-ItemDefinitionNon-Newtonian & Complex Fluids
1. Domain1.1 Scope of the DomainBoundariesThe range of phenomena the science includes and excludes.Includes fluids whose stress–strain relationship is nonlinear or history-dependent, including shear-thinning, shear-thickening, viscoelastic, thixotropic, yield-stress, polymeric, colloidal, granular, suspension, and biological fluids. Excludes ideal Newtonian fluids and purely solid mechanics unless treated as continuum analogs.
ScaleThe spatial, temporal, or organizational level at which the science operates (e.g., quantum, cellular, social, cosmic).Operates from microscopic scales of molecular chains, colloids, and suspended particles to macroscopic flows in pipes, channels, biological systems, industrial mixers, and geophysical flows. Time scales range from millisecond relaxation processes to long-term structural evolution.
1.2 Ontological CommitmentsEntitiesThe kinds of things assumed to exist within the domain (particles, organisms, agents, fields, etc.).Macromolecules, polymer chains, suspended particles, micelles, droplets, colloids, gels, granular elements, networks, solvent molecules, and internal structural degrees of freedom such as orientation or stretch.
PropertiesThe fundamental attributes these entities possess (mass, charge, genotype, preference, etc.).Viscosity, relaxation time, elasticity, yield stress, shear-thinning index, shear-thickening strength, thixotropic decay rate, particle concentration, microstructure orientation, and strain-dependent modulus.
CategoriesThe basic ontological types used to classify domain elements (substances, processes, relations, structures).Fluid classes (viscoelastic, shear-thinning, shear-thickening, thixotropic, yield-stress, granular), microstructural mechanisms, flow regimes, constitutive behaviors, and deformation histories.
1.3 State-VariablesVariablesThe measurable or definable properties that describe system conditions.Shear rate, shear stress, strain, strain rate, viscosity, normal stresses, relaxation variables, structural parameters, particle concentration, velocity field, and pressure field.
ParameterizationHow variables encode and represent the system’s state.States encoded by constitutive model parameters, rheological coefficients, relaxation spectra, particle distribution metrics, structural memory variables, and boundary condition definitions.
1.4 Admissible IdealizationsSimplificationsConceptual reductions used to make the domain tractable (point masses, rational agents, perfect gases).Lumped relaxation models, simplified constitutive equations, continuum assumptions for particle suspensions, ignoring microstructure restructuring, steady-state approximations, neglecting thermal fluctuations, and idealized boundary conditions.
Validity ConditionsThe limits and contexts in which idealizations hold or break down.Valid when microstructure evolves smoothly, deformation rates remain within model limits, particle interactions are moderate, and temperature effects are negligible; breaks down for extreme shear, rapid transitions, strong particle aggregation, or flow-induced fractures.
1.5 Domain AssumptionsStructural AssumptionsBackground ontological stances such as determinism, continuity, randomness, discreteness.Assumes the fluid can be treated as a continuum with internal structure, rheological laws capture microstructural response, stress can depend on deformation history, and interactions between phases or particles are coarse-grained into effective parameters.
Implicit CommitmentsUnstated but necessary assumptions that shape the field’s conceptual structure.Assumes constitutive models are adequate surrogates for underlying physics, memory effects can be encoded in finite variables, microstructure does not change too abruptly, and bulk rheology reflects representative microscopic behavior.
1.6 Internal Coherence RequirementsConsistencyThe demand that domain concepts do not contradict one another.Requires compatibility among constitutive equations, microstructural models, conservation laws, and measured rheological behavior; no contradictions between predicted and observed flow responses.
CompatibilityThe requirement that entities, variables, and assumptions fit together into a unified descriptive framework.Entities, variables, and assumptions must integrate into a unified description linking microstructure, stress response, flow geometry, and history-dependent behavior under continuum mechanics.
2. Evidence Layer2.1 Observable PhenomenaObservablesThe aspects of the domain that can produce detectable signals accessible to measurement.Observable signals include nonlinear stress–strain behavior, shear-thinning or thickening trends, normal stress differences, yield-stress onset, viscoelastic relaxation, thixotropic decay, particle migration, microstructural orientation, flow-induced alignment, and time-dependent viscosity changes.
Detection LimitsThe boundaries of what can be resolved or sensed by current instruments or methods.Limited by rheometer sensitivity, maximum attainable shear rates, ability to capture rapid relaxation events, optical resolution for particle or microstructure tracking, difficulty probing opaque or highly concentrated suspensions, and noise in measuring weak normal stresses.
2.2 Measurement SystemsUnitsStandardized quantifications (meters, seconds, volts, decibels, dollars, etc.) necessary for consistent comparison.Uses pascals, seconds, meters, shear rate in 1 per second, viscosity in pascal seconds, stress in pascals, strain, strain rate, particle concentration in volume fraction, and temperature in kelvins.
InstrumentsDevices and tools (microscopes, spectrometers, sensors, surveys, detectors) used to produce measurements.Instruments include rotational rheometers, capillary rheometers, extensional rheometers, microfluidic devices, high speed cameras, particle tracking imagers, confocal microscopes, velocimetry tools, ultrasonic rheology instruments, and pressure sensors.
2.3 Operational DefinitionsDefinitionsTerms defined by specific measurement procedures, ensuring empirical clarity.Terms such as yield stress, relaxation time, shear-thinning index, viscosity function, thixotropic recovery time, normal stress difference, and effective modulus are defined through standardized rheometric tests or imaging analyses.
ProceduresThe explicit steps required to perform a measurement in a reproducible way.Procedures include shear ramp tests, oscillatory shear tests, creep and recovery protocols, flow visualization, particle tracking, microfluidic constriction tests, controlled temperature sweeps, and repeated cycling to measure history dependence.
2.4 Data AcquisitionProtocolsFormal processes for gathering data under controlled or standardized conditions.Data gathered using steady shear scans, time-resolved stress measurements, oscillatory frequency sweeps, microstructure imaging sequences, extensional flow capture, and repeated loading cycles to quantify structural evolution.
SamplingRules determining which subset of the domain is measured and how representative it is.Sampling rules include fixed shear rate intervals, time steps matched to relaxation scales, spatial sampling across flow channels, particle sampling across microstructure fields, and repeated tests for reproducibility of history-dependent behavior.
2.5 Data Character & FormatData TypesThe form raw evidence takes (time series, spectra, images, counts, qualitative records).Data appears as stress–strain curves, viscosity vs shear rate curves, relaxation or creep curves, microstructure images, particle trajectories, velocity fields, extensional flow profiles, and normal stress measurements.
ResolutionThe granularity or precision with which data is captured.Determined by rheometer torque resolution, camera frame rate, imaging magnification, sensor noise, microfluidic channel geometry, and temporal resolution needed for fast relaxation or thixotropic processes.
2.6 Reliability & CalibrationCalibrationAdjustment procedures ensuring instruments produce accurate results.Calibration uses reference Newtonian fluids, instrument torque and normal force calibration routines, temperature calibration, optical system calibration for imaging-based measurements, and repeated baseline runs.
Error CharacterizationIdentification and quantification of noise, uncertainty, bias, and measurement error.Errors arise from wall slip, shear banding, sample heterogeneity, temperature drift, instrument inertia, particle aggregation, optical distortion, noisy stress signals, and incomplete equilibration during time-dependent tests.
3. Structural Layer3.1 Patterns & RegularitiesLaws / RelationsStable, repeatable patterns governing how observables behave across conditions.Stable patterns include nonlinear stress–strain relationships, shear-thinning or thickening behavior, time-dependent viscosity, normal stress differences, stress overshoot, thixotropic breakdown and recovery, yield-stress onset, microstructure alignment under flow, and hysteresis in repeated deformation cycles.
InvariantsQuantities or properties that remain constant under transformations (symmetries, conservation laws).Invariants include conserved mass and momentum under continuum assumptions, persistent relaxation spectra for specific materials, stable constitutive parameters over moderate deformation ranges, and repeatable microstructure orientations under steady shear.
3.2 Causal ArchitectureMechanismsUnderlying processes or structures that produce the observed regularities.Mechanisms arise from polymer chain stretching and relaxation, particle interactions and collisions, microstructure rearrangement, entanglement networks, micelle breakage and reformation, thixotropic restructuring, and granular friction or jamming transitions.
PathwaysOrganized sequences of interactions forming a causal chain or network.Pathways include microstructure formation under rest, breakdown under shear, relaxation after flow cessation, growth of viscoelastic stresses, yielding transitions, particle migration, shear band development, and slow structural aging or rejuvenation.
3.3 Theoretical VocabularyConceptsCore terms that encode the domain’s structure (force, gene, equilibrium, field).Core terms include viscosity function, relaxation time, shear rate, strain history, yield stress, viscoelasticity, thixotropy, shear banding, microstructure orientation, entanglement density, and rate-dependent modulus.
ClassificationsTaxonomies, categories, or typologies that organize entities and relations.Classifies fluids as viscoelastic, shear-thinning, shear-thickening, yield-stress, thixotropic, granular, colloidal, polymeric, micellar, or biological; and classifies flow regimes such as laminar, shear-banded, or jammed.
3.4 Formal RepresentationsEquationsMathematical constructs expressing laws, relations, or mechanisms.Includes constitutive equations such as power-law, Carreau, Cross, Herschel-Bulkley, Oldroyd-B, Maxwell, Jeffreys, Bingham, Giesekus, or thixotropic kinetic equations; also includes microstructure evolution equations and multiphase formulations.
ModelsStructured representations—mathematical, computational, or conceptual—used to predict and explain phenomena.Uses constitutive models, viscoelastic models, kinetic microstructure models, particle-based models, granular flow models, suspension models, and hybrid fluid–microstructure frameworks.
3.5 Idealized StructuresSimplified ModelsPurposeful abstractions that capture essential dynamics while omitting irrelevant detail.Idealizations include uniform particle distributions, single relaxation time models, linear viscoelastic approximations, ignoring wall slip or shear banding, neglecting thermal fluctuations, and simplified constitutive functions.
Limit ConditionsRegimes where specific models or approximations hold (classical vs. quantum, linear vs. nonlinear).Valid when shear rates are moderate, particles remain uniformly dispersed, microstructure evolves smoothly, viscoelastic stresses stay below nonlinear thresholds, and temperature fluctuations remain small; breaks down during jamming, fracture, extreme shear, or strong microstructure collapse.
3.6 Integrative FrameworksUnifying TheoriesHigher-order structures that connect disparate laws or mechanisms under a coherent whole.Includes frameworks linking microstructure dynamics, viscoelasticity, thixotropy, yielding behavior, multiphase effects, and nonlinear rheology into a unified description of deformation and flow.
Interdisciplinary LinksPoints where the theory connects to adjacent sciences or larger explanatory systems.Links to materials science, soft matter physics, polymer science, colloid science, granular physics, biology, chemical engineering, and computational rheology.
4. Method Layer4.1 Inquiry DesignExperimental DesignStructured plans for manipulating variables to test causal claims.Experiments vary shear rate, strain amplitude, temperature, concentration, particle loading, flow geometry, and rest time to test causal effects on viscoelasticity, shear-thinning, shear-thickening, thixotropy, and yield behavior. Designs include oscillatory tests, creep tests, flow–stop–flow protocols, and controlled microstructure perturbations.
Observational DesignSystematic approaches for gathering non-manipulated data (surveys, field studies, natural experiments).Observational approaches measure spontaneous microstructure rearrangement, aging, flow-induced banding, or natural recovery in resting samples without external manipulation, using imaging or low-shear probes.
4.2 Testing & ValidationHypothesis TestingProcedures for evaluating whether evidence supports or contradicts specific claims.Hypotheses tested by comparing measured stress responses, relaxation curves, microstructure images, viscosity functions, band formation, or yield thresholds with predictions from constitutive or microstructure models.
ReplicationThe requirement that results be independently reproducible under similar conditions.Replication requires repeating shear protocols, imaging sequences, temperature sweeps, or flow cycles across independent instruments, different sample batches, and varied geometries to confirm rheological behavior.
4.3 Inference & EvaluationStatistical InferenceRules for drawing conclusions from noisy or incomplete data.Statistical tools analyze noisy stress signals, fit relaxation spectra, estimate viscosity functions, quantify microstructure distribution, determine yield onset variability, and compute confidence intervals for rate-dependent parameters.
Model ComparisonCriteria (fit, simplicity, predictive accuracy, robustness) used to evaluate competing models.Models evaluated based on ability to reproduce stress–strain curves, predict relaxation or creep behavior, capture shear banding or thixotropic cycles, match microstructure evolution, and maintain stability across wide strain or rate ranges.
4.4 Error ManagementError AnalysisIdentification and quantification of random and systematic errors.Errors arise from wall slip, shear banding, sample heterogeneity, instrument inertia, temperature fluctuations, transient effects during flow startup, optical distortions in imaging, sample degradation, and incomplete equilibration between tests.
Bias ControlMethods for minimizing subjective, instrumental, or procedural biases.Bias minimized through independent rheometer calibration, blind processing of stress data, multiple geometries to detect wall slip, controlled sample preparation, cross validation with imaging data, and repeated testing after rest periods.
4.5 Adjudication & RevisionPeer ScrutinyCollective evaluation of claims through critique, review, and debate.Findings evaluated via repetition across laboratories, cross comparison of constitutive fits, peer review, imaging-based validation of microstructure models, and benchmarking against standard reference fluids.
Theory RevisionProcedures for modifying, replacing, or discarding models based on new evidence.Theories updated when experiments reveal unexpected behavior such as anomalous thickening, nonlinear viscoelastic response, delayed yielding, irreversible thixotropic collapse, or microstructure transitions not captured by existing models.
4.6 Integrity ConditionsTransparencyRequirements to disclose methods, data, assumptions, and limitations.Requires complete disclosure of shear history, sample preparation, temperature control, measurement protocols, instrument limitations, model assumptions, and any structural aging or degradation effects.
Ethical StandardsNorms ensuring responsible conduct in experimentation, data handling, and publication.Requires accurate reporting, avoidance of selective cycle omission, proper handling of sensitive biological or reactive samples, responsible chemical disposal, and adherence to scientific integrity in rheology and soft matter research.