2010-10-13
10:15 at HCI J 574Concentrated hard sphere colloids are among the simplest of soft matter systems and a popular model system to study the dynamics of the glass transition. Yet the flow behaviour of ‘glassy’ suspensions, especially their nonlinear rheology is poorly understood. In this talk I will discuss both shear banding as well as shear melting behaviour on the particle level, which we have studied via fast confocal microscopy and simultaneous rheology. For volume fractions above ~60%, we observe a type of shear banding so far unobserved in soft glasses, with velocity profiles which become increasingly nonlinear below a characteristic rate and strongly localized near yielding. I will discuss a new theory which attributes this behaviour to small concentration gradients arising from a fundamental flow instability due to flow-concentration coupling. The model accounts for all aspects of the observed phenomenology and may have strong implications for non-uniform flow in other glassy materials [1]. On the particle level, we have studied the shear induced speeding up of structural relaxation in the system, which shows a nontrivial powerlaw dependence on the flow rate [2]. This behaviour is inconsistent with flow induced relaxation expected for an ‘ideal’ glass, and instead provides support for a recently proposed Eyring-type model. [1] R. Besseling, et al. cond-mat. arXiv:1009.1579 [2] R. Besseling, et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 99, 028301 (2007). New phenomena in the flow of concentrated colloids
Rut Besseling
School of Physics and Astronomy, The University of Edinburgh, UK
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