Bulletin of the American Physical Society
2024 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 4–8, 2024; Minneapolis & Virtual
Session Z34: Topological Defects in Soft/Active/Biological Matter II
11:30 AM–2:18 PM,
Friday, March 8, 2024
Room: 102F
Sponsoring
Units:
DSOFT GSNP DBIO
Chair: Jorge Vinals, University of Minnesota
Abstract: Z34.00008 : Cooperative motion and granule rotation during rapid grain shrinking in colloidal crystals*
1:18 PM–1:30 PM
Presenter:
Avani Anne
(Harvey Mudd College)
Authors:
Avani Anne
(Harvey Mudd College)
Eric Corona
(Harvey Mudd College)
Helen K Chaffee
(Harvey Mudd College)
Chris G Couto
(Harvey Mudd College)
Elizabeth L Rogers
(Harvey Mudd College)
Aaron L Galper
(Harvey Mudd College)
Conor M Floyd
(Harvey Mudd College)
Ananya Venkatachalam
(Harvey Mudd College)
Sharon J Gerbode
(Harvey Mudd College)
In 2D polycrystals, fully enclosed grain boundary loops tend to dissolve over time. Our colloid experiments show that grain boundary loops shrink via two processes: steps of rapid dissolution and plateaus of slow dissolution. This contradicts continuum theory, which predicts a constant rate of dissolution. We find that the periods of rapid dissolution involve the cooperative motion of particles together in rotating, hexagonal ‘granules.’ During such granule rotation, particle displacements follow a string-like pattern as previously observed in glassy dynamics at grain boundaries, but here we find that motion is directed along the outlines of the underlying Moiré pattern. Furthermore, we employ Brownian Dynamics simulations of grain boundary loops to study the effect of crystal area fraction, finding that tighter crystals shrink more quickly, via cooperative hexagonal granule rotation. Collectively these results point to the importance of cooperative granule rotation in enabling rapid grain dissolution.
*This research was funded by a Cottrell Scholar Award from Research Corporation, awarded to SJG
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