Abstract
A simple and inexpensive low-shear capillary viscometer has been developed. It comprises a coiled plastic capillary 1 mm in dia. and 4–8 m long. A pressure difference is imposed on the capillary by means of a rubber air inflation bulb and is read on an ordinary manometer. The flow rate is measured by timing the blood meniscus between two divisions in a graduated tube. Use of a very long capillary allows one to attain very small shear rates while employing large pressure differences, thus ensuring that surface tension effects are negligible. The range of relative velocity (
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