68 research outputs found
Polyelectrolytes in the presence of multivalent ions: gelation versus segregation
We analyze solutions of strongly charged chains bridged by linkers such as
multivalent ions. The gelation induced by the strong short range electrostatic
attractions is dramatically suppressed by the long range electrostatic
correlations due to the charge along the uncrosslinked monomers and ions. A
modified Debye-Huckel approach of crosslinked clusters of charged chains is
used to determined the mean field gelation transition self-consistently. Highly
dilute polyelectrolyte solutions tend to segregate macroscopically. Semidilute
solutions can form gels if the Bjerrum length and the distance between
neighboring charged monomers along the chain are both greater than the ion
size
Elasticity near the vulcanization transition
Signatures of the vulcanization transition--amorphous solidification induced
by the random crosslinking of macromolecules--include the random localization
of a fraction of the particles and the emergence of a nonzero static shear
modulus. A semi-microscopic statistical-mechanical theory is presented of the
latter signature that accounts for both thermal fluctuations and quenched
disorder. It is found (i) that the shear modulus grows continuously from zero
at the transition, and does so with the classical exponent, i.e., with the
third power of the excess cross-link density and, quite surprisingly, (ii) that
near the transition the external stresses do not spoil the spherical symmetry
of the localization clouds of the particles.Comment: REVTEX, 5 pages. Minor change
Effect of galactomannans on the viscoelastic behaviour of pectin/calcium networks
An investigation was carried out on the effect of the addition of galactomannans to pectin/calcium networks with different structural and rheological characteristics. For those pectin/calcium gels characterized
by an elastic equilibrium modulus, the addition of the galactomannan increased both the storage and loss mod&i, especially at short time scales. This increase was greater than that which could be expected by simple additivity of the viscoelastic properties of each isolated system. The pectin/calcium network remained the continuous gel matrix controlling the viscoelastic behaviour of these systems at low frequency. For
pectin/calcium systems close to the sol-gel transition or at low pH, the mixed systems evolved towards the behaviour of Viscoelastic liquids in the presence of increasing concentration of the non-gelling polymer. These overall results suggest that there is no specific interaction and that
the changes in the rheological properties of the pectin gels are due to galactomannan microphase separation limited by the entrapment of these macromolecules in the pectin-calcium network
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