rheopexic
Rheopexic is an adjective used in rheology to describe a time-dependent flow behavior in which a material’s viscosity or resistance to flow increases with time under constant shear or stress. This phenomenon is part of the broader class of time-dependent rheological behaviors and is the opposite of thixotropy, where viscosity decreases with time under shear. Materials that display this behavior are often described as rheopectic, and the term rheopexic is used to emphasize the progressive strengthening of flow resistance over time.
Etymology and terminology commonly relate rheopexy to the prefix rheo-, meaning flow, and to suffixes used in
Mechanisms underlying rheopexy are material-specific but generally involve time-dependent formation or strengthening of internal networks under
Measurement and interpretation rely on rheological testing. At a fixed shear rate, a rheopexic fluid shows