53 research outputs found
Novel Experimentally Observed Phenomena in Soft Matter
Soft materials such as colloidal suspensions, polymer solutions and liquid
crystals are constituted by mesoscopic entities held together by weak forces.
Their mechanical moduli are several orders of magnitude lower than those of
atomic solids. The application of small to moderate stresses to these materials
results in the disruption of their microstructures. The resulting flow is
non-Newtonian and is characterised by features such as shear rate-dependent
viscosities and non-zero normal stresses. This article begins with an
introduction to some unusual flow properties displayed by soft matter.
Experiments that report a spectrum of novel phenomena exhibited by these
materials, such as turbulent drag reduction, elastic turbulence, the formation
of shear bands and the existence of rheological chaos, flow-induced
birefringence and the unusual rheology of soft glassy materials, are reviewed.
The focus then shifts to observations of the liquid-like response of granular
media that have been subjected to external forces. The article concludes with
examples of the patterns that emerge when certain soft materials are vibrated,
or when they are displaced with Newtonian fluids of lower viscosities.Comment: 30 pages, 11 figures, invited review article, supplementary videos
may be obtained from the journal websit
Formation and Rupture of Ca Induced Pectin Biopolymer Gels
When calcium salts are added to an aqueous solution of polysaccharide pectin,
ionic cross-links form between pectin chains, giving rise to a gel network in
dilute solution. In this work, dynamic light scattering (DLS) is employed to
study the microscopic dynamics of the fractal aggregates (flocs) that
constitute the gels, while rheological measurements are performed to study the
process of gel rupture. As calcium salt concentration is increased, DLS
experiments reveal that the polydispersities of the flocs increase
simultaneously with the characteristic relaxation times of the gel network.
Above a critical salt concentration, the flocs become interlinked to form a
reaction-limited fractal gel network. Rheological studies demonstrate that the
limits of the linear rheological response and the critical stresses required to
rupture these networks both decrease with increase in salt concentration. These
features indicate that the ion-mediated pectin gels studied here lie in a
`strong link' regime that is characterised by inter-floc links that are
stronger than intra-floc links. A scaling analysis of the experimental data
presented here demonstrates that the elasticities of the individual fractal
flocs exhibit power-law dependences on the added salt concentration. We
conclude that when pectin and salt concentrations are both increased, the
number of fractal flocs of pectin increases simultaneously with the density of
crosslinks, giving rise to very large values of the bulk elastic modulus.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figure
The encapsulation of hydrophobic drugs in Pluronic F127 micelles: the effects of drug hydrophobicity, solution temperature and pH
Three drugs, Ibuprofen, Aspirin and Erythromycin, are encapsulated in
spherical Pluronic F127 micelles. The shapes and the size distributions of the
micelles in dilute, aqueous solutions, with and without drugs, are ascertained
using cryo- Scanning Electron Microscopy and Dynamic Light Scattering (DLS)
experiments, respectively. Uptake of drugs above a threshold concentration is
seen to reduce the critical micellization temperature of the solution. The mean
hydrodynamic radii and polydispersities of the micelles are found to increase
with decrease in temperature and in the presence of drug molecules. The
hydration of the micellar core at lower temperatures is verified using
fluorescence measurements. Increasing solution pH leads to the ionization of
the drugs incorporated in the micellar cores. This causes rupture of the
micelles and release of the drugs into the solution at the highest solution pH
value of 11.36 investigated here and is studied using DLS and fluorescence
spectrocopy.Comment: 23 pages, includes 8 figure
Use of ultrasound attenuation spectroscopy to determine the size distribution of clay tactoids in aqueous suspensions
The dispersion processes of aqueous samples of clay are studied using
ultrasound attenuation spectroscopy. The attenuation spectra that are acquired
in the frequency range MHz are used to determine the particle size
distributions (PSDs) for different concentrations and ages of the clay
suspensions. Our analysis, using equivalent spherical diameter (ESD) for
circular discs under Stokes drag in samples of concentrations greater than
1.5\% w/v, shows that a substantial fraction of the aggregates in suspension
are actually tactoids that are composed of more than one platelet. This is in
contrast to the general belief that clay disperses into individual platelets in
the concentration range where their suspensions exhibit glassy behavior. We
conclude that the incomplete fragmentation of the clay tactoids arises from the
rapid enhancement of the inter-tactoid Coulombic repulsion.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figure
Dynamical Behaviour in the Nonlinear Rheology of Surfactant Solutions
Several surfactant molecules self-assemble in solution to form long, flexible
wormlike micelles which get entangled with each other, leading to viscoelastic
gel phases. We discuss our recent work on the rheology of such a gel formed in
the dilute aqueous solutions of a surfactant CTAT. In the linear rheology
regime, the storage modulus and loss modulus
have been measured over a wide frequency range. In
the nonlinear regime, the shear stress shows a plateau as a function
of the shear rate above a certain cutoff shear rate
. Under controlled shear rate conditions in the plateau regime,
the shear stress and the first normal stress difference show oscillatory
time-dependence. The analysis of the measured time series of shear stress and
normal stress has been done using several methods incorporating state space
reconstruction by embedding of time delay vectors.The analysis shows the
existence of a finite correlation dimension and a positive Lyapunov exponent,
unambiguously implying that the dynamics of the observed mechanical instability
can be described by that of a dynamical system with a strange attractor of
dimension varying from 2.4 to 2.9.Comment: 12 pages, includes 7 eps figure
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