Saliva, and other complex viscoelastic fluids like shaving cream and shampoo, contain long chains of molecules called polymers. In the case of saliva, the polymers are proteins known as mucopolysaccharides.
Key factors involved in the beading mechanism are :
- fluid inertia, or the tendency for a fluid to keep moving unless acted upon by an external force
- viscosity, or the time it takes a stretched polymer to 'relax' or snap back to its original shape when the stretching ceases
- capillary time, or how long it would take for the surface of the fluid strand to vibrate if plucked
- the viscous force compared to the inertial force
- the relaxation time compared to the capillary time
Reference:
Pradeep P. Bhat, Santosh Appathurai, Michael T. Harris, Matteo Pasquali, Gareth H. McKinley, Osman A. Basaran. Formation of beads-on-a-string structures during break-up of viscoelastic filaments. Nature Physics, 2010; DOI: 10.1038/nphys1682
Activities
- Design an experiment to measure the viscosity of shampoo.
- Suggest ways that the viscosity of shampoo could be changed.
- Design an experiment to test one of the hypotheses above.
- Design an experiment to measure the fluid of inertia of a range of different fluids.
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