2012-04-18
15:45 at HCI G 7I will present and discuss recent results on the history dependence of rheological experiments in dense colloidal dispersions obtained from a first principles approach to the non-linear rheology. Assuming homogeneous flow and neglecting hydrodynamic interactions, a theoretical description of the stresses, micro-structure, and particle motion close to a colloidal glass transition are developed. Results for large amplitude oscillatory shearing, step-strains, and other time-dependent transient deformation protocols provide a unifying description of the dispersion properties under general strains. Shear-thinning, plastic deformation and an-elastic behavior are observed. Adding Brownian dynamics simulations, the shear-induced particle motion provides information on the microscopic transport mechanisms in the dense dispersions close to the colloidal glass transition. Mode coupling theory of the history dependent deformation of colloidal glass
Matthias Fuchs
Universität Konstanz
© Apr 2025
mk
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