The aging behavior of colloidal suspensions of laponite, a model synthetic clay, is investigated using light scattering techniques. In order to measure the complete dynamic structure factor as a function of time and of wave vector, we have developed an original optical setup using a multispeckle technique for simple light scattering. We have thus measured the correlation of the scattered light intensity as a function of the age of the sample t(w) for various concentrations. For sufficiently concentrated samples, we observe a two-stage relaxation process. The fast relaxation is diffusive, stationary, and reminiscent of the liquidlike behavior observed in less concentrated samples. The slow relaxation behavior, however, is more complex. It exhibits two successive regimes as the sample ages. In the first regime, the decay time tau(a) increases exponentially with t(w) as long as tau(a)
We use optical techniques to study the aging behavior of glassy colloidal suspensions of Laponite, a synthetic Hectorite clay. Multi-speckle diffusing wave spectroscopy measurements of tracer particle motion in Laponite suspensions show that the slow collective relaxation time τ of the glassy medium scales linearly with the age tw of the sample, a universal feature of many glassy systems. Moreover, the mean-square displacement of the tracer particles in the terminal regime scales as ∆r 2 (tw, t) ∼ (t/tw) γ , where γ = 1.5 ± 0.1. Light scattering studies of pure glassy Laponite suspensions show that the scattered light intensity is q-independent and decreases slowly with age, indicating that homogenization of the sample occurs during the aging process. We propose that the novel slow dynamics in this system is governed by random, localized stress relaxation events in the glassy phase.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.