Do you want to publish a course? Click here

Gel and glass transition in fragile colloidal clays

222   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 Added by Roberta Angelini
 Publication date 2019
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




Ask ChatGPT about the research

Dynamic Light Scattering (DLS) measurements were performed on colloidal suspensions of Laponitetextsuperscript{textregistered} at different concentrations in the range $C_text{w}= (1.5{div}3.0)$%. The slowing down of the dynamics induced by aging was monitored by following the temporal evolution of autocorrelation functions at different concentrations towards the gel and glass transition. Exploiting analogies with supercooled liquids approaching their glass transitions, an Angell plot for the structural relaxation times was drawn. Finally, the fragility of Laponitetextsuperscript{textregistered} suspensions at different concentrations, in different solvents, at two salt concentrations and with the addition of a polymer was reported and discussed.



rate research

Read More

Microscopic relaxation timescales are estimated from the autocorrelation functions obtained by dynamic light scattering experiments for Laponite suspensions with different concentrations ($C_{L}$), added salt concentrations ($C_{S}$) and temperatures ($T$). It has been shown in an earlier work [Soft Matter, 10, 3292-3300 (2014)] that the evolutions of relaxation timescales of colloidal glasses can be compared with molecular glass formers by mapping the waiting time ($t_{w}$) of the former with the inverse of thermodynamic temperature ($1/T$) of the latter. In this work, the fragility parameter $D$, which signifies the deviation from Arrhenius behavior, is obtained from fits to the time evolutions of the structural relaxation timescales. For the Laponite suspensions studied in this work, $D$ is seen to be independent of $C_{L}$ and $C_{S}$, but is weakly dependent on $T$. Interestingly, the behavior of $D$ corroborates the behavior of fragility in molecular glass formers with respect to equivalent variables. Furthermore, the stretching exponent $beta$, which quantifies the width $w$ of the spectrum of structural relaxation timescales is seen to depend on $t_{w}$. A hypothetical Kauzmann time $t_{k}$, analogous to the Kauzmann temperature for molecular glasses, is defined as the timescale at which $w$ diverges. Corresponding to the Vogel temperature defined for molecular glasses, a hypothetical Vogel time $t^{infty}_{alpha}$ is also defined as the time at which the structural relaxation time diverges. Interestingly, a correlation is observed between $t_{k}$ and $t^{infty}_{alpha}$, which is remarkably similar to that known for fragile molecular glass formers. A coupling model that accounts for the $t_{w}$-dependence of the stretching exponent is used to analyse and explain the observed correlation between $t_{k}$ and $t^{infty}_{alpha}$.
We use numerical simulations and an athermal quasi-static shear protocol to investigate the yielding of a model colloidal gel. Under increasing deformation, the elastic regime is followed by a significant stiffening before yielding takes place. A space-resolved analysis of deformations and stresses unravel how the complex load curve observed is the result of stress localization and that the yielding can take place by breaking a very small fraction of the network connections. The stiffening corresponds to the stretching of the network chains, unbent and aligned along the direction of maximum extension. It is characterized by a strong localization of tensile stresses, that triggers the breaking of a few network nodes at around 30% of strain. Increasing deformation favors further breaking but also shear-induced bonding, eventually leading to a large-scale reorganization of the gel structure at the yielding. At low enough shear rates, density and velocity profiles display significant spatial inhomogeneity during yielding in agreement with experimental observations.
We investigate the heterogeneous dynamics in a model, where chemical gelation and glass transition interplay, focusing on the dynamical susceptibility. Two independent mechanisms give raise to the correlations, which are manifested in the dynamical susceptibility: one is related to the presence of permanent clusters, while the other is due to the increase of particle crowding as the glass transition is approached. The superposition of these two mechanisms originates a variety of different behaviours. We show that these two mechanisms can be unentangled considering the wave vector dependence of the dynamical susceptibility.
We study experimentally the origin of heterogeneous dynamics in strongly driven glass-forming systems. Thereto, we apply a well-defined force with a laser line trap on individual colloidal polystyrene probe particles seeded in an emulsion glass composed of droplets of the same size. Fluid and glass states can be probed. We monitor the trajectories of the probe and measure displacements and their distributions. Our experiments reveal intermittent dynamics around a depinning transition at a threshold force. For smaller forces, linear response connects mean displacement and quiescent mean squared displacement. Mode coupling theory calculations rationalize the observations.
Motivated by the mean field prediction of a Gardner phase transition between a normal glass and a marginally stable glass, we investigate the off-equilibrium dynamics of three-dimensional polydisperse hard spheres, used as a model for colloidal or granular glasses. Deep inside the glass phase, we find that a sharp crossover pressure $P_{rm G}$ separates two distinct dynamical regimes. For pressure $P < P_{rm G}$, the glass behaves as a normal solid, displaying fast dynamics that quickly equilibrates within the glass free energy basin. For $P>P_{rm G}$, instead, the dynamics becomes strongly anomalous, displaying very large equilibration time scales, aging, and a constantly increasing dynamical susceptibility. The crossover at $P_{rm G}$ is strongly reminiscent of the one observed in three-dimensional spin-glasses in an external field, suggesting that the two systems could be in the same universality class, consistently with theoretical expectations.
comments
Fetching comments Fetching comments
Sign in to be able to follow your search criteria
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا