710 research outputs found

    Intrinsic aging and effective viscosity in the slow dynamics of a soft glass with tunable elasticity

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    We investigate by rheology and light scattering the influence of the elastic modulus, G0G_0, on the slow dynamics and the aging of a soft glass. We show that the slow dynamics and the aging can be entirely described by the evolution of an effective viscosity, ηeff\eta_{eff}, defined as the characteristic time measured in a stress relaxation experiment times G0G_0. At all time, ηeff\eta_{eff} is found to be independent of G0G_0, of elastic perturbations, and of the rate at which the sample is quenched in the glassy phase. We propose a simple model that links ηeff\eta_{eff} to the internal stress built up at the fluid-to-solid transition

    Ultraslow dynamics and stress relaxation in the aging of a soft glassy system

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    We use linear rheology and multispeckle dynamic light scattering (MDLS) to investigate the aging of a gel composed of multilamellar vesicles. Light scattering data indicate rearrangement of the gel through an unusual ultraslow ballistic motion. A dramatic slowdown of the dynamics with sample age twt_{w} is observed for both rheology and MDLS, the characteristic relaxation time scaling as twμt_{w}^{\mu}. We find the same aging exponent μ=0.78\mu =0.78 for both techniques, suggesting that they probe similar physical processes, that is the relaxation of applied or internal stresses for rheology or MDLS, respectively. A simple phenomenological model is developed to account for the observed dynamics.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, Submitted to PR

    Polyelectrolyte-induced peeling of charged multilamellar vesicles

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    We study mixtures of charged surfactants, which alone in solution form uni- and multilamellar vesicles, and oppositely charged polyelectrolytes (PEs). The phase behavior is investigated at fixed surfactant concentration as a function of the PE-to-surfactant charge ratio xx. We find that, for x>0x>0, aggregates form. Light microscopy and X-ray scattering experiments show that the isoelectric point plays a crucial role since the morphology and the microscopic structure of the aggregates are different before (x≤1x\leq1) and after the isoelectric point (x>1x>1). To better understand the dynamics for the formation of PE/surfactant complexes, we perform light microscopy experiments where we follow in real-time the effect of a PE solution on one multilamellar vesicle (MLV). We find that the PE induces a peeling of the bilayers of the MLV one by one. The peeling is accompanied by strong shape fluctuations of the MLV and leads ultimately to a pile of small aggregates. This novel phenomenon is analyzed in detail and discussed in terms of PE-induced tension, and pore formation and growth in a surfactant bilayer.Comment: to appear in Langmui

    Slow dynamics in glassy soft matter

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    Measuring, characterizing and modelling the slow dynamics of glassy soft matter is a great challenge, with an impact that ranges from industrial applications to fundamental issues in modern statistical physics, such as the glass transition and the description of out-of-equilibrium systems. Although our understanding of these phenomena is still far from complete, recent simulations and novel theoretical approaches and experimental methods have shed new light on the dynamics of soft glassy materials. In this paper, we review the work of the last few years, with an emphasis on experiments in four distinct and yet related areas: the existence of two different glass states (attractive and repulsive), the dynamics of systems very far from equilibrium, the effect of an external perturbation on glassy materials, and dynamical heterogeneity

    Free radially expanding liquid sheet in air: time- and space-resolved measurement of the thickness field

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    The collision of a liquid drop against a small target results in the formation of a thin liquid sheet that extends radially until it reaches a maximum diameter. The subsequent retraction is due to the air-liquid surface tension. We have used a time- and space-resolved technique to measure the thickness field of this class of liquid sheet, based on the grey level measurement of the image of a dyed liquid sheet recorded using a fast camera. This method enables a precise measurement of the thickness in the range (10−450) μm(10-450) \, \mathrm{\mu m}, with a temporal resolution equal to that of the camera. We have measured the evolution with time since impact, tt, and radial position, rr, of the thickness, h(r,t)h(r,t), for various drop volumes and impact velocities. Two asymptotic regimes for the expansion of the sheet are evidenced. The scalings of the thickness with tt and rr measured in the two regimes are those that were predicted in \citet{Rozhkov2004} fort the short-time regime and \citet{Villermaux2011} for the long time regime, but never experimentally measured before. Interestingly, our experimental data also evidence the existence of a maximum of the film thickness hmax(r)h_{\rm{max}}(r) at a radial position rhmax(t)r_{\rm{h_{max}}}(t) corresponding to the crossover of these two asymptotic regimes. The maximum moves with a constant velocity of the order of the drop impact velocity, as expected theoretically. Thanks to our visualization technique, we also evidence an azimuthal thickness modulation of the liquid sheets.Comment: accepted for publication in Journal of Fluid Mechanic

    Origin of the slow dynamics and the aging of a soft glass

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    We study by light microscopy a soft glass consisting of a compact arrangement of polydisperse elastic spheres. We show that its slow and non-stationary dynamics results from the unavoidable small fluctuations of temperature, which induce intermittent local mechanical shear in the sample, because of thermal expansion and contraction. Temperature-induced shear provokes both reversible and irreversible rearrangements whose amplitude decreases with time, leading to an exponential slowing down of the dynamics with sample age.Comment: published in PRL 97, 238301, 200
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