191 research outputs found
Length scale dependence of dynamical heterogeneity in a colloidal fractal gel
We use time-resolved dynamic light scattering to investigate the slow
dynamics of a colloidal gel. The final decay of the average intensity
autocorrelation function is well described by , with and
decreasing from 1.5 to 1 with increasing . We show that the dynamics is not
due to a continuous ballistic process, as proposed in previous works, but
rather to rare, intermittent rearrangements. We quantify the dynamical
fluctuations resulting from intermittency by means of the variance
of the instantaneous autocorrelation function, the analogous of
the dynamical susceptibility studied in glass formers. The amplitude
of is found to grow linearly with . We propose a simple --yet
general-- model of intermittent dynamics that accounts for the dependence
of both the average correlation functions and .Comment: Revised and improved, to appear in Europhys. Let
A microscopic view of the yielding transition in concentrated emulsions
We use a custom shear cell coupled to an optical microscope to investigate at
the particle level the yielding transition in concentrated emulsions subjected
to an oscillatory shear deformation. By performing experiments lasting
thousands of cycles on samples at several volume fractions and for a variety of
applied strain amplitudes, we obtain a comprehensive, microscopic picture of
the yielding transition. We find that irreversible particle motion sharply
increases beyond a volume-fraction dependent critical strain, which is found to
be in close agreement with the strain beyond which the stress-strain relation
probed in rheology experiments significantly departs from linearity. The
shear-induced dynamics are very heterogenous: quiescent particles coexist with
two distinct populations of mobile and `supermobile' particles. Dynamic
activity exhibits spatial and temporal correlations, with rearrangements events
organized in bursts of motion affecting localized regions of the sample.
Analogies with other sheared soft materials and with recent work on the
transition to irreversibility in sheared complex fluids are briefly discussed.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures. Submitted to Soft Matte
Brambilla et al. Reply to a Comment by J. Reinhardt et al. on "Probing the equilibrium dynamics of colloidal hard spheres above the mode-coupling glass transition"
G. Brambilla et al. Reply to a Comment by J. Reinhardt et al. questioning the
existence of equilibrium dynamics above the critical volume fraction of
colloidal hard spheres predicted by mode coupling theory.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev. Lett. Reply to a Comment by J. Reinhardt et
al. (see arXiv:1010.2891), which questions the existence of equilibrium
dynamics above the critical volume fraction of glassy colloidal hard spheres
predicted by mode coupling theor
Highly nonlinear dynamics in a slowly sedimenting colloidal gel
We use a combination of original light scattering techniques and particles
with unique optical properties to investigate the behavior of suspensions of
attractive colloids under gravitational stress, following over time the
concentration profile, the velocity profile, and the microscopic dynamics.
During the compression regime, the sedimentation velocity grows nearly linearly
with height, implying that the gel settling may be fully described by a
(time-dependent) strain rate. We find that the microscopic dynamics exhibit
remarkable scaling properties when time is normalized by strain rate, showing
that the gel microscopic restructuring is dominated by its macroscopic
deformation.Comment: Physical Review Letters (2011) xxx
Subdiffusion and intermittent dynamic fluctuations in the aging regime of concentrated hard spheres
We study the nonequilibrium aging dynamics in a system of quasi-hard spheres
at large density by means of computer simulations. We find that, after a sudden
quench to large density, the relaxation time initially increases exponentially
with the age of the system. After a surprisingly large crossover time, the
system enters the asymptotic aging regime characterized by a linear increase of
the relaxation time with age. In this aging regime, single particle motion is
strongly non-Fickian, with a mean-squared displacement increasing
subdiffusively, associated to broad, non-Gaussian tails in the distribution of
particle displacements. We find that the system ages through temporally
intermittent relaxation events, and a detailed finite size analysis of these
collective dynamic fluctuations reveals that these events are not spanning the
entire system, but remain spatially localized.Comment: 11 pages; 10 fig
Investigation of -dependent dynamical heterogeneity in a colloidal gel by x-ray photon correlation spectroscopy
We use time-resolved X-Photon Correlation Spectroscopy to investigate the
slow dynamics of colloidal gels made of moderately attractive carbon black
particles. We show that the slow dynamics is temporally heterogeneous and
quantify its fluctuations by measuring the variance of the instantaneous
intensity correlation function. The amplitude of dynamical fluctuations has a
non-monotonic dependence on scattering vector , in stark contrast with
recent experiments on strongly attractive colloidal gels [Duri and Cipelletti,
\textit{Europhys. Lett.} \textbf{76}, 972 (2006)]. We propose a simple scaling
argument for the -dependence of fluctuations in glassy systems that
rationalizes these findings.Comment: Final version published in PR
Multiangle static and dynamic light scattering in the intermediate scattering angle range
We describe a light scattering apparatus based on a novel optical scheme
covering the scattering angle range 0.5\dg \le \theta \le 25\dg, an
intermediate regime at the frontier between wide angle and small angle setups
that is difficult to access by existing instruments. Our apparatus uses
standard, readily available optomechanical components. Thanks to the use of a
charge-coupled device detector, both static and dynamic light scattering can be
performed simultaneously at several scattering angles. We demonstrate the
capabilities of our apparatus by measuring the scattering profile of a variety
of samples and the Brownian dynamics of a dilute colloidal suspension
A double rigidity transition rules the fate of drying colloidal drops
The evaporation of drops of colloidal suspensions plays an important role in
numerous contexts, such as the production of powdered dairies, the synthesis of
functional supraparticles, and virus and bacteria survival in aerosols or drops
on surfaces. The presence of colloidal particles in the evaporating drop
eventually leads to the formation of a dense shell that may undergo a shape
instability. Previous works propose that, for drops evaporating very fast, the
instability occurs when the particles form a rigid porous solid, constituted of
permanently aggregated particles at random close packing. To date, however, no
measurements could directly test this scenario and assess whether it also
applies to drops drying at lower evaporation rates, severely limiting our
understanding of this phenomenon and the possibility of harnessing it in
applications. Here, we combine macroscopic imaging and space- and time-resolved
measurements of the microscopic dynamics of colloidal nanoparticles in drying
drops, measuring the evolution of the thickness of the shell and the spatial
distribution and mobility of the nanoparticles. We find that, above a threshold
evaporation rate, the drop undergoes successively two distinct shape
instabilities. While the second instability is due to the permanent aggregation
of nanoparticles, as hypothesized in previous works on fast-evaporating drops,
we show that the first one results from a reversible glass transition of the
shell, unreported so far. We rationalize our findings and discuss their
implications in the framework of a unified state diagram for the drying of
colloidal drops
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