Arrested fluid-fluid phase separation in depletion systems: Implications of the characteristic length on gel formation and rheology

Citation:

Conrad, J. C. ; Wyss, H. M. ; Trappe, V. ; Manley, S. ; Miyazaki, K. ; Kaufman, L. J. ; Schofield, A. B. ; Reichman, D. R. ; Weitz, D. A. Arrested fluid-fluid phase separation in depletion systems: Implications of the characteristic length on gel formation and rheology. Journal of Rheology 2010, 54, 421-438. Copy at http://www.tinyurl.com/y4afdqhk
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Abstract:

We investigate the structural, dynamical, and rheological properties of colloid-polymer mixtures in a volume fraction range of phi=0.15-0.35. Our systems are density-matched, residual charges are screened, and the polymer-colloid size ratio is similar to 0.37. For these systems, the transition to kinetically arrested states, including disconnected clusters and gels, coincides with the fluid-fluid phase separation boundary. Structural investigations reveal that the characteristic length, L, of the networks is a strong function of the quench depth: for shallow quenches, L is significantly larger than that obtained for deep quenches. By contrast, L is for a given quench depth almost independent of phi; this indicates that the strand thickness increases with phi. The strand thickness determines the linear rheology: the final relaxation time exhibits a strong dependence on phi, whereas the high frequency modulus does not. We present a simple model based on estimates of the strand breaking time and shear modulus that semiquantitatively describes the observed behavior.

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Last updated on 04/01/2021