We investigate mixing effects on the glass state of binary colloidal hard-sphere-like mixtures with large size asymmetry, at a constant volume fraction φ = 0.61. The structure, dynamics and viscoelastic response as a function of mixing ratio reflect a transition between caging by one or the other component. The strongest effect of mixing is observed in systems dominated by caging of the large component. The possibility to pack a large number of small spheres in the free volume left by the large ones induces a pronounced deformation of the cage of the large spheres, which become increasingly delocalised. This results in faster dynamics and a strong reduction of the elastic modulus. When the relative volume fraction of small spheres exceeds that of large spheres, the small particles start to form their own cages, slowing down the dynamics and increasing the elastic modulus of the system. The large spheres become the minority and act as an impurity in the ordering beyond the first neighbour shell, i.e. the cage, and do not directly affect the particle organisation on the cage level. In such a system, when shear at constant rate is applied, melting of the glass is observed due to facilitated out-of-cage diffusion which is associated with structural anisotropy induced by shear.
While semi-flexible polymers and fibres are an important class of material due to their rich mechanical properties, it remains unclear how these properties relate to the microscopic conformation of the polymers. Actin filaments constitute an ideal model polymer system due to their micron-sized length and relatively high stiffness that allow imaging at the single filament level. Here we study the effect of entanglements on the conformational dynamics of actin filaments in shear flow. We directly measure the full three-dimensional conformation of single actin filaments, using confocal microscopy in combination with a counter-rotating cone-plate shear cell. We show that initially entangled filaments form disentangled orientationally ordered hairpins, confined in the flow-vorticity plane. In addition, shear flow causes stretching and shear alignment of the hairpin tails, while the filament length distribution remains unchanged. These observations explain the strain-softening and shearthinning behaviour of entangled F-actin solutions, which aids the understanding of the flow behaviour of complex fluids containing semi-flexible polymers.
We determined the phase boundaries of aqueous mixtures containing colloidal rod-like fd-viruses and polystyrene spheres using diffusing-wave spectroscopy and compared the results with free volume theory predictions. Excluded volume interactions in mixtures of colloidal rods and spheres lead to mediated depletion interactions. The strength and range of this attractive interaction depend on the concentrations of the particles, the length L and diameter D of the rods and the radius R of the spheres. At strong enough attraction, this depletion interaction leads to phase separation. We experimentally determined the rod and sphere concentrations where these phase transitions occur by systematically varying the size ratios L/R and D/R and the aspect ratio L/D. This was done by using spheres with different radii and modifying the effective diameter of the rods through either the ionic strength of the buffer or anchoring a polymeric brush to the surface of the rods. The observed phase transitions were from a binary fluid to a colloidal gas/liquid phase coexistence which occurred already at very low concentrations due to the depletion efficiency of highly anisotropic rods. The experimentally measured phase transitions were compared to phase boundaries obtained using free volume theory (FVT), a well established theory for calculating the phase behaviour of colloidal particles mixed with depletants. We find good correspondence between the experimental phase transitions and the theoretical FVT model where the excluded volume of the rod-like depletants was explicitly accounted for in both the reservoir and the system.
We determined the phase boundary of an ideal rod-sphere mixture consisting of fd-virus, which is an established model system for mono-disperse colloidal rods, and density matched mono-disperse polystyrene beads employing diffuse wave spectroscopy. The low volume fraction of fd needed to induce a phase separation at relatively low ionic strength exemplifies the fact that slender rods are very effective depletion agents. Confocal microscopy showed that stable clusters are formed during phase separation. Relaxation after shear deformation of these clusters showed that the phase separation is gas-liquid-like and that the interfacial tension involved is very low as in colloid-polymer mixtures.
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