6,293 research outputs found

    Complex oscillatory yielding of model hard sphere glasses

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    The yielding behaviour of hard sphere glasses under large amplitude oscillatory shear has been studied by probing the interplay of Brownian motion and shear-induced diffusion at varying oscillation frequencies. Stress, structure and dynamics are followed by experimental rheology and Browian Dynamics simulations. Brownian motion assisted cage escape dominates at low frequencies while escape through shear-induced collisions at high ones, both related with a yielding peak in\ G′′G^{\prime \prime}. At intermediate frequencies a novel, for HS glasses, double peak in G′′G^{\prime \prime} is revealed reflecting both mechanisms. At high frequencies and strain amplitudes a persistent structural anisotropy causes a stress drop within the cycle after strain reversal, while higher stress harmonics are minimized at certain strain amplitudes indicating an apparent harmonic response.Comment: 4 figures placed at the end with following order: Figure 1, figure 3, figure 4 and figure

    Stokesian Dynamics simulation of Brownian suspensions

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    The non-equilibrium behaviour of concentrated colloidal dispersions is studied by Stokesian Dynamics, a general molecular-dynamics-like technique for simulating particles suspended in a viscous fluid. The simulations are of a suspension of monodisperse Brownian hard spheres in simple shear flow as a function of the Péclet number, Pe, which measures the relative importance of shear and Brownian forces. Three clearly defined regions of behaviour are revealed. There is first a Brownian-motion-dominated regime (Pe ≤ 1) where departures from equilibrium in structure and diffusion are small, but the suspension viscosity shear thins dramatically. When the Brownian and hydrodynamic forces balance (Pe ≈ 10), the dispersion forms a new ‘phase’ with the particles aligned in ‘strings’ along the flow direction and the strings are arranged hexagonally. This flow-induced ordering persists over a range of Pe and, while the structure and diffusivity now vary considerably, the rheology remains unchanged. Finally, there is a hydrodynamically dominated regime (Pe > 200) with a dramatic change in the long-time self-diffusivity and the rheology. Here, as the Péclet number increases the suspension shear thickens owing to the formation of large clusters. The simulation results are shown to agree well with experiment

    Yielding of Hard-Sphere Glasses during Start-Up Shear

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    Concentrated hard-sphere suspensions and glasses are investigated with rheometry, confocal microscopy, and Brownian dynamics simulations during start-up shear, providing a link between microstructure, dynamics, and rheology. The microstructural anisotropy is manifested in the extension axis where the maximum of the pair-distribution function exhibits a minimum at the stress overshoot. The interplay between Brownian relaxation and shear advection as well as the available free volume determine the structural anisotropy and the magnitude of the stress overshoot. Shear-induced cage deformation induces local constriction, reducing in-cage diffusion. Finally, a superdiffusive response at the steady state, with a minimum of the time-dependent effective diffusivity, reflects a continuous cage breakup and reformation

    Stress development, relaxation, and memory in colloidal dispersions: Transient nonlinear microrheology

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    The motion of a single Brownian particle in a complex fluid can reveal material behavior both at and away from equilibrium. In active microrheology, a probe particle is driven by an external force through a complex medium and its motion studied in order to infer properties of the embedding material. Most work in microrheology has focused on steady behavior and established the relationship between the motion of the probe, the microstructure, and the effective microviscosity of the medium. Transient behavior in the near-equilibrium, linear-response regime has also been studied via its connection to low-amplitude oscillatory probe forcing and the complex modulus; at very weak forcing, the microstructural response that drives viscosity is indistinguishable from equilibrium fluctuations. But important information about the basic physical aspects of structural development and relaxation in a medium is captured by startup and cessation of the imposed deformation in the nonlinear regime, where the structure is driven far from equilibrium. Here, we study theoretically and by dynamic simulation the transient behavior of a colloidal dispersion undergoing nonlinear microrheological forcing. The strength with which the probe is forced, Fext, compared to thermal forces, kT/b, governs the dynamics and defines a Péclet number, Pe = F^ext/(kT/b), where kT is the thermal energy and b is the colloidal bath particle size. For large Pe, a boundary layer (in which unsteady advection balances diffusion) forms at particle contact on the time scale of the flow, a/U, where a is the probe size and U its speed, whereas the wake forms over O(Pe) diffusive time steps. Similarly, relaxation following cessation occurs over several time scales corresponding to distinct physical processes. For very short times, the time scale for relaxation is set by a boundary layer of thickness δ ∼ (a+b)/Pe, and so τ ∼ δ^2/D_r, where Dr is the relative diffusivity between the probe of size a and a bath particle. Nearly all stress relaxation occurs during this time. At longer times, the Brownian diffusion of the bath particles acts to close the wake on a time scale set by how long it takes a bath particle to diffuse laterally across it, τ ∼ (a+b)^2/D_r. Although the majority of the microstructural relaxation occurs during this wake-healing process, it does so with little change in the stress. Also during relaxation, the probe travels backward in the suspension; this recovered strain is proportional to the free energy stored in the compressed particle configuration, an indicator that the stress is proportional to the free energy density stored entropically in the microstructure. Theoretical results are compared with Brownian dynamics simulation where it is found that the dilute theory captures the correct behavior even for concentrated suspensions. Two modes of forcing are studied: Constant force and constant velocity. Results are compared to analogous macrorheology results for suspensions undergoing simple shear flow

    Single-particle motion in colloids: force-induced diffusion

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    We study the fluctuating motion of a Brownian-sized probe particle as it is dragged by a constant external force through a colloidal dispersion. In this nonlinear-microrheology problem, collisions between the probe and the background bath particles, in addition to thermal fluctuations of the solvent, drive a long-time diffusive spread of the probe's trajectory. The influence of the former is determined by the spatial configuration of the bath particles and the force with which the probe perturbs it. With no external forcing the probe and bath particles form an equilibrium microstructure that fluctuates thermally with the solvent. Probe motion through the dispersion distorts the microstructure; the character of this deformation, and hence its influence on the probe's motion, depends on the strength with which the probe is forced, F^(ext), compared to thermal forces, kT/b, defining a Péclet number, Pe = F^(ext)/(kT/b), where kT is the thermal energy and b the bath particle size. It is shown that the long-time mean-square fluctuational motion of the probe is diffusive and the effective diffusivity of the forced probe is determined for the full range of Péclet number. At small Pe Brownian motion dominates and the diffusive behaviour of the probe characteristic of passive microrheology is recovered, but with an incremental flow-induced ‘microdiffusivity’ that scales as D^(micro) ~ D_aPe^2φ_b, where φ_b is the volume fraction of bath particles and D_a is the self-diffusivity of an isolated probe. At the other extreme of high Péclet number the fluctuational motion is still diffusive, and the diffusivity becomes primarily force induced, scaling as (F^(ext)/η)φ_b, where η is the viscosity of the solvent. The force-induced microdiffusivity is anisotropic, with diffusion longitudinal to the direction of forcing larger in both limits compared to transverse diffusion, but more strongly so in the high-Pe limit. The diffusivity is computed for all Pe for a probe of size a in a bath of colloidal particles, all of size b, for arbitrary size ratio a/b, neglecting hydrodynamic interactions. The results are compared with the force-induced diffusion measured by Brownian dynamics simulation. The theory is also compared to the analogous shear-induced diffusion of macrorheology, as well as to experimental results for macroscopic falling-ball rheometry. The results of this analysis may also be applied to the diffusive motion of self-propelled particles

    Anisotropic Diffusion Limited Aggregation

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    Using stochastic conformal mappings we study the effects of anisotropic perturbations on diffusion limited aggregation (DLA) in two dimensions. The harmonic measure of the growth probability for DLA can be conformally mapped onto a constant measure on a unit circle. Here we map mm preferred directions for growth of angular width σ\sigma to a distribution on the unit circle which is a periodic function with mm peaks in [−π,π)[-\pi, \pi) such that the width σ\sigma of each peak scales as σ∼1/k\sigma \sim 1/\sqrt{k}, where kk defines the ``strength'' of anisotropy along any of the mm chosen directions. The two parameters (m,k)(m,k) map out a parameter space of perturbations that allows a continuous transition from DLA (for m=0m=0 or k=0k=0) to mm needle-like fingers as k→∞k \to \infty. We show that at fixed mm the effective fractal dimension of the clusters D(m,k)D(m,k) obtained from mass-radius scaling decreases with increasing kk from DDLA≃1.71D_{DLA} \simeq 1.71 to a value bounded from below by Dmin=3/2D_{min} = 3/2. Scaling arguments suggest a specific form for the dependence of the fractal dimension D(m,k)D(m,k) on kk for large kk, form which compares favorably with numerical results.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Stability of degenerate Cauchy horizons in black hole spacetimes

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    In the multihorizon black hole spacetimes, it is possible that there are degenerate Cauchy horizons with vanishing surface gravities. We investigate the stability of the degenerate Cauchy horizon in black hole spacetimes. Despite the asymptotic behavior of spacetimes (flat, anti-de Sitter, or de Sitter), we find that the Cauchy horizon is stable against the classical perturbations, but unstable quantum mechanically.Comment: Revtex, 4 pages, no figures, references adde
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