131 research outputs found
Density of states of colloidal glasses
Glasses are structurally liquid-like, but mechanically solid-like. Most
attempts to understand glasses start from liquid state theory. Here we take the
opposite point of view, and use concepts from solid state physics. We determine
the vibrational modes of a colloidal glass experimentally, and find soft
low-frequency modes that are very different in nature from the usual acoustic
vibrations of ordinary solids. These modes extend over surprisingly large
length scales
Shear banding of colloidal glasses - a dynamic first order transition?
We demonstrate that application of an increasing shear field on a glass leads
to an intriguing dynamic first order transition in analogy to equilibrium
transitions. By following the particle dynamics as a function of the driving
field in a colloidal glass, we identify a critical shear rate upon which the
diffusion time scale of the glass exhibits a sudden discontinuity. Using a new
dynamic order parameter, we show that this discontinuity is analogous to a
first order transition, in which the applied stress acts as the conjugate field
on the system's dynamic evolution. These results offer new perspectives to
comprehend the generic shear banding instability of a wide range of amorphous
materials.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Single particle fluctuations and directional correlations in driven hard sphere glasses
Via event driven molecular dynamics simulations and experiments, we study the
packing fraction and shear-rate dependence of single particle fluctuations and
dynamic correlations in hard sphere glasses under shear. At packing fractions
above the glass transition, correlations increase as shear rate decreases: the
exponential tail in the distribution of single particle jumps broadens and
dynamic four-point correlations increase. Interestingly, however, upon
decreasing the packing fraction, a broadening of the exponential tail is also
observed, while dynamic heterogeneity is shown to decrease. An explanation for
this behavior is proposed in terms of a competition between shear and thermal
fluctuations. Building upon our previous studies [Chikkadi et al, Europhys.
Lett. (2012)], we further address the issue of anisotropy of the dynamic
correlations.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figure
Emergent vortices in populations of colloidal rollers
Coherent vortical motion has been reported in a wide variety of populations
including living organisms (bacteria, fishes, human crowds) and synthetic
active matter (shaken grains, mixtures of biopolymers), yet a unified
description of the formation and structure of this pattern remains lacking.
Here we report the self-organization of motile colloids into a macroscopic
steadily rotating vortex. Combining physical experiments and numerical
simulations, we elucidate this collective behavior. We demonstrate that the
emergent-vortex structure lives on the verge of a phase separation, and single
out the very constituents responsible for this state of polar active matter.
Building on this observation, we establish a continuum theory and lay out a
strong foundation for the description of vortical collective motion in a broad
class of motile populations constrained by geometrical boundaries
Shear-induced anisotropic decay of correlations in hard-sphere colloidal glasses
Spatial correlations of microscopic fluctuations are investigated via
real-space experiments and computer simulations of colloidal glasses under
steady shear. It is shown that while the distribution of one-particle
fluctuations is always isotropic regardless of the relative importance of shear
as compared to thermal fluctuations, their spatial correlations show a marked
sensitivity to the competition between shear-induced and thermally activated
relaxation. Correlations are isotropic in the thermally dominated regime, but
develop strong anisotropy as shear dominates the dynamics of microscopic
fluctuations. We discuss the relevance of this observation for a better
understanding of flow heterogeneity in sheared amorphous solids.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Preventing transition to turbulence: a viscosity stratification does not always help
In channel flows a step on the route to turbulence is the formation of
streaks, often due to algebraic growth of disturbances. While a variation of
viscosity in the gradient direction often plays a large role in
laminar-turbulent transition in shear flows, we show that it has, surprisingly,
little effect on the algebraic growth. Non-uniform viscosity therefore may not
always work as a flow-control strategy for maintaining the flow as laminar.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
Linear Stability Analysis for Plane-Poiseuille Flow of an Elastoviscoplastic fluid with internal microstructure
We study the linear stability of Plane Poiseuille flow of an
elastoviscoplastic fluid using a revised version of the model proposed by Putz
and Burghelea (Rheol. Acta (2009)48:673-689). The evolution of the
microstructure upon a gradual increase of the external forcing is governed by a
structural variable (the concentration of solid material elements) which decays
smoothly from unity to zero as the stresses are gradually increased beyond the
yield point. Stability results are in close conformity with the ones of a
pseudo-plastic fluid. Destabilizing effects are related to the presence of an
intermediate transition zone where elastic solid elements coexist with fluid
elements. This region brings an elastic contribution which does modify the
stability of the flow
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