APS March Meeting 2011
Volume 56, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2011;
Dallas, Texas
Session X44: Focus Session: Polymer Colloids-Structure, Function, and Dynamics II
2:30 PM–5:42 PM,
Thursday, March 24, 2011
Room: A309
Sponsoring
Units:
DPOLY DFD
Chair: Alberto Fernandez De Las Nieves, Georgia Institute of Technology
Abstract ID: BAPS.2011.MAR.X44.9
Abstract: X44.00009 : Yielding mechanisms and particle rearrangements in colloidal glasses and gels under shear
4:30 PM–5:06 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
George Petekidis
(IESL-FORTH)
Steady and oscillatory rheology was utilized to study the mechanical
response of colloidal glasses and gels with particular emphasis
in the way
these are shear melted (yield) [1,2]. We used suspensions of hard
sphere
colloids with short-range depletion attractions induced by the
addition of
non-adsorbing linear polymer. The linear viscoelasticity and the
yielding
mechanisms at different regimes of colloid volume fraction and
particle
attractions are discussed. While hard sphere glasses exhibit a
single step
yielding due to cage breaking, attractive glasses show a two-step
yielding
reflecting bond and cage breaking respectively [1]. Here we present
experimental data both along a line of equal attraction, varying the
particle volume fraction, from an attractive glass to a low
volume fraction
gel as well as at intermediate and high volume fractions with
increasing the
attraction strength. In attractive gels yielding remains a two
step process
until very low $\phi $'s. The first yield strain is related with
in-cage or
inter-cluster bond braking while the second yield point is
attributed to
braking of cages or clusters into smaller constituents [3]. The
latter
increases as volume fraction is decreased due to enhancement of
structural
inhomogeneities. When the range of attraction was increased, both
yield
strains increase, scaling with the range of attraction and
accompanied
structural changes. Brownian Dynamics simulations and Dynamic Light
scattering under shear (LS-echo) provide information on the
microscopic
particle rearrangements and structural changes during yielding
and flow such
as the size and structure of clusters that change under steady
shear as a
function of shear rate. Work in collaboration with: N. Koumakis,
(FORTH), M. Laurati, S.U. Egelhaaf (U. Duesseldorf) and J. F.
Brady (Caltech).
\\[4pt]
[1] K. Pham et al. J. Rheology 52, 649 (2008)\\[0pt]
[2] M. Laurati, J. Chem. Phys. 130, 134907 (2009)\\[0pt]
[3] Koumakis and Petekidis, submitted (2010); Laurati et al,
submitted (2010)
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2011.MAR.X44.9