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  • Fluids are a necessary part of everyday life.

  • After all, without water you couldn’t live, and without chocolate syrup, well, what would

  • be the point?

  • But have you ever noticed that not all liquids behave the same?

  • In fact, some of them do some pretty bewildering stuff under the right circumstances, and even

  • after decades of research scientists are no closer to understanding why.

  • One question about strange fluids may have finally been answered thanks to some glass

  • beads and—I always love saying thislaser beams.

  • All liquids that we encounter in the real world can be boiled down to one of two kinds.

  • Theyre either Newtonian, or non-Newtonian.

  • Newtonian fluids are pretty easy to grasp.

  • I mean, not literally in some cases—a Newtonian fluid like water would squirt right out of

  • your hand.

  • But chocolate syrup is also Newtonian even though it would slowly dribble out of your

  • hand, maybe as you frantically lick your palm to get as much of that rich goodness before

  • it drips away.

  • It's not just me, right?

  • Uh, anyway.

  • In other words, chocolate syrup is much more viscous than water.

  • Viscosity is a measure of a fluid’s resistance to flow.

  • It’s basically the friction between molecules in a fluid.

  • The higher the viscosity, the slower the flow.

  • A Newtonian fluid obeys Newton's Law of Viscosity which means its viscosity is constant.

  • It doesn’t change when a force is applied to it.

  • Non-Newtonian fluids, on the other, less sticky hand, do change their viscositywhich can

  • lead to some pretty zany shenanigans.

  • There are different sub-categories of non-Newtonian fluids depending on how their viscosity changes.

  • There are dilatants whose viscosity increases as force is applied.

  • Examples of dilatants include quicksand, silly putty, and the cornstarch-water mixture known

  • to 1st grade classrooms as oobleck.

  • The tiny corn starch particles in oobleck can flow freely with the water molecules if

  • you gently dip your fingers in, but give it a good smack and the cornstarch locks up,

  • giving oobleck a surprisingly solid character.

  • You could straight up run across a swimming pool if you dumped enough cornstarch in it.

  • But, there are vandalism laws so, y’knowdon’t.

  • Some fluids get more viscous when force is applied, but the opposite can also be true.

  • Ketchup is in a category of non-Newtonian fluids called pseudoplastics.

  • When no force is applied, it just sits there.

  • Not doing anything.

  • But when you give the back of the bottle a whack the viscosity decreases and the ketchup

  • comes out.

  • Inside the sauce at a molecular level what’s happening is long chains of atoms called polymers

  • get tangled together and hold fast, but when smacked or shaken, they stretch out and align,

  • allowing the gooey red paste to slide around, hopefully onto your french fries but probably

  • on your pants too.

  • Still there are many more weird non-Newtonian behaviors scientists don’t have answers

  • for.

  • They may have just solved one riddle that’s stood for over 50 years.

  • The problem was first noticed in the 1960s when engineers were attempting to extract

  • oil from the ground with fluids that contained long-chain polymers.

  • Pumping these so-calledpusher fluidsinto the ground below a certain rate worked

  • fine, but pumping them faster would cause them to become much more viscous, like oobleck.

  • The fluids would only behave this way when flowing through the microscopic spaces between

  • soil; when not confined to the twisty windy paths in a porous medium, the fluidsviscosity

  • would actually drop as more force is applied, like ketchup.

  • For a while, scientists thought maybe the polymers were clogging up the pores in the

  • soil, but that couldn’t explain how the fluids flowed easily when the flow rate dropped

  • again.

  • It wasn’t until a new study was published in late 2021 that scientists think they might

  • have cracked it.

  • Part of the problem theyve had is soil and other porous media aren’t see-through,

  • so it’s hard to tell what’s going on down there.

  • To solve this they created a custom medium out of glass beads.

  • And they concocted a polymer solution with the same refractive index of the glass, meaning

  • the liquid and solid would both bend light exactly the same way.

  • To see the windy paths fluids would follow in the spaces between the beads, the researchers

  • added a red dye to the solution that would give off a certain wavelength of light when

  • hit with a laser.

  • To visualize how the fluid was moving, they added tracer particles that would emit

  • a different color when excited by another laser.

  • With this extremely complicated setup in place they observed the fluid flowing at different

  • rates and found that the long polymers in it started tumbling around as the fluid moved

  • faster.

  • This movement pushed on other nearby molecules in the liquid and created a phenomenon called

  • elastic turbulence,” creating eddies and slowing the whole fluid down.

  • The researchers think this new understanding of why pusher fluids suddenly become so viscous

  • could be useful for purifying groundwater.

  • It may aid in the development of new polymer-containing solutions that can force water through rocks,

  • trapping contaminants in the process.

  • But there’s more work to be done because elastic turbulence itself isn’t fully understood.

  • Maybe thatll be the next riddle solved.

  • Or maybe first well get an answer for why people like ketchup on scrambled eggs.

  • Granted that has nothing to do with its non-Newtonian properties but it’s still

  • something I just can’t wrap my head around.

  • Thanks so much for watching, don't forget to subscribe, and I'll see you for the next Seeker.

Fluids are a necessary part of everyday life.

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