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Vapour deposition can directly produce ultrastable glasses, which are similar to conventional glasses aged over thousands of years. The highly mobile surface layer is believed to accelerate the ageing process of vapour-deposited glasses, but its microscopic kinetics has not been experimentally observed. Here we studied the deposition growth kinetics of a two-dimensional colloidal glass at the single-particle level using video microscopy. We found that newly deposited particles in the surface layer (depth $d<14$ particles) relaxed via frequent out-of-cage motions, while particles in the deeper middle layer ($14<dlesssim100$ particles) relaxed via activation of cooperative rearrangement regions (CRRs). These CRRs were much larger, more anisotropic and occurred more frequently than CRRs in the bulk ($dgtrsim100$ particles) or after deposition. Their centers of mass moved towards the surface, while the particles within moved towards the bulk, causing free-volume bubbles to move towards the surface to give a more compact bulk glass. This two-step relaxation in two surface layers is distinct from the previously assumed relaxation in one surface mobile layer
We investigate the stress relaxation behavior on the application of step strains to aging aqueous suspensions of the synthetic clay Laponite. The stress exhibits a two-step decay, from which the slow relaxation modes are extracted as functions of the
The rheological response, in particular the non-linear response, to oscillatory shear is experimentally investigated in colloidal glasses. The glasses are highly concentrated binary hard-sphere mixtures with relatively large size disparities. For a s
We conduct experiments on two-dimensional packings of colloidal thermosensitive hydrogel particles whose packing fraction can be tuned above the jamming transition by varying the temperature. By measuring displacement correlations between particles,
We report results of dynamic light scattering measurements of the coherent intermediate scattering function (ISF) of glasses of hard spheres for several volume fractions and a range of scattering vectors around the primary maximum of the static struc
We study the flow of concentrated hard-sphere colloidal suspensions along smooth, non-stick walls using cone-plate rheometry and simultaneous confocal microscopy. In the glass regime, the global flow shows a transition from Herschel-Bulkley behavior