1,754 research outputs found

    Arrest and flow of colloidal glasses

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    I review recent progress in understanding the arrest and flow behaviour of colloidal glasses, based on mode coupling theory (MCT) and related approaches. MCT has had notable recent successes in predicting the re-entrant arrest behaviour of colloids with short range attractions. Developments based upon it offer important steps towards calculating, from rational foundations in statistical mechanics, nonlinear flow parameters such as the yield stress of a colloidal glass. An important open question is why MCT works so well.Comment: Invited Plenary Contribution Th2002 Paris, to appear in Annales Henri Poincar

    Competition between glass transition and liquid-gas separation in attracting colloids

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    We present simulation results addressing the phenomena of colloidal gelation induced by attractive interactions. The liquid-gas transition is prevented by the glass arrest at high enough attraction strength, resulting in a colloidal gel. The dynamics of the system is controlled by the glass, with little effect of the liquid-gas transition. When the system separates in a liquid and vapor phases, even if the denser phase enters the non-ergodic region, the vapor phase enables the structural relaxation of the system as a whole.Comment: Proceedings of the glass conference in Pisa (September 06

    Flow instabilities in complex fluids: Nonlinear rheology and slow relaxations

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    We here present two simplified models aimed at describing the long-term, irregular behaviours observed in the rheological response of certain complex fluids, such as periodic oscillations or chaotic-like variations. Both models exploit the idea of having a (non-linear) rheological equation, controlling the temporal evolution of the stress, where one of the participating variables (a "structural" variable) is subject to a distinct dynamics with a different relaxation time. The coupling between the two dynamics is a source of instability.Comment: Proceedings of "Slow Dynamics in Complex Systems 2003" (Sendai, Japan, Nov. 2003

    Sedimentation, trapping, and rectification of dilute bacteria

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    The run-and-tumble dynamics of bacteria, as exhibited by \textit{E. coli}, offers a simple experimental realization of non-Brownian, yet diffusive, particles. Here we present some analytic and numerical results for models of the ideal (low-density) limit in which the particles have no hydrodynamic or other interactions and hence undergo independent motions. We address three cases: sedimentation under gravity; confinement by a harmonic external potential; and rectification by a strip of `funnel gates' which we model by a zone in which tumble rate depends on swim direction. We compare our results with recent experimental and simulation literature and highlight similarities and differences with the diffusive motion of colloidal particles

    Computational confirmation of scaling predictions for equilibrium polymers

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    We report the results of extensive Dynamic Monte Carlo simulations of systems of self-assembled Equilibrium Polymers without rings in good solvent. Confirming recent theoretical predictions, the mean-chain length is found to scale as \Lav = \Lstar (\phi/\phistar)^\alpha \propto \phi^\alpha \exp(\delta E) with exponents αd=δd=1/(1+γ)≈0.46\alpha_d=\delta_d=1/(1+\gamma) \approx 0.46 and αs=[1+(γ−1)/(νd−1)]/2≈0.60,δs=1/2\alpha_s = [1+(\gamma-1)/(\nu d -1)]/2 \approx 0.60, \delta_s=1/2 in the dilute and semi-dilute limits respectively. The average size of the micelles, as measured by the end-to-end distance and the radius of gyration, follows a very similar crossover scaling to that of conventional quenched polymer chains. In the semi-dilute regime, the chain size distribution is found to be exponential, crossing over to a Schultz-Zimm type distribution in the dilute limit. The very large size of our simulations (which involve mean chain lengths up to 5000, even at high polymer densities) allows also an accurate determination of the self-avoiding walk susceptibility exponent γ=1.165±0.01\gamma = 1.165 \pm 0.01.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, LATE

    Swelling kinetics of the onion phase

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    A theory is presented for the behavior of an array of multi-lamellar vesicles (the onion phase) upon addition of solvent. A unique feature of this system is the possibility to sustain pressure gradients by tension in the lamellae. Tension enables the onions to remain stable beyond the unbinding point of a flat lamellar stack. The model accounts for various concentration profiles and interfaces developing in the onion as it swells. In particular, densely packed `onion cores' are shown to appear, as observed in experiments. The formation of interfaces and onion cores may represent an unusual example of stabilization of curved interfaces in confined geometry.Comment: 13 pages, 10 PS figures, LaTeX using SVJour, submitted to Eur Phys J

    Dynamics of Polydisperse Polymer Mixtures

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    We develop a general analysis of the diffusive dynamics of polydisperse polymers in the presence of chemical potential gradients, within the context of the tube model (with all species entangled). We obtain a set of coupled dynamical equations for the time evolution of the polymeric densities with explicitly derived coefficients. For the case of chemical polydispersity (a set of chains that are identical except for having a continuous spectrum of enthalpic interaction strengths) the coupled equations can be fully solved in certain cases. For these we study the linearised mode spectrum following a quench through the spinodal, with and without a passive (polymeric) solvent. We also study the more conventional case of length polydisperse chains in a poor solvent.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figures,revised versio
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