We study ionic microgel suspensions composed of swollen particles for various
single-particle stiffnesses. We measure the osmotic pressure π of these
suspensions and show that it is dominated by the contribution of free ions in
solution. As this ionic osmotic pressure depends on the volume fraction of the
suspension ϕ, we can determine ϕ from π, even at volume fractions
so high that the microgel particles are compressed. We find that the width of
the fluid-solid phase coexistence, measured using ϕ, is larger than its
hard-sphere value for the stiffer microgels that we study and progressively
decreases for softer microgels. For sufficiently soft microgels, the
suspensions are fluid-like, irrespective of volume fraction. By calculating the
dependence on ϕ of the mean volume of a microgel particle, we show that
the behavior of the phase-coexistence width correlates with whether or not the
microgel particles are compressed at the volume fractions corresponding to
fluid-solid coexistence.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure