210 research outputs found
Complex oscillatory yielding of model hard sphere glasses
The yielding behaviour of hard sphere glasses under large amplitude
oscillatory shear has been studied by probing the interplay of Brownian motion
and shear-induced diffusion at varying oscillation frequencies. Stress,
structure and dynamics are followed by experimental rheology and Browian
Dynamics simulations. Brownian motion assisted cage escape dominates at low
frequencies while escape through shear-induced collisions at high ones, both
related with a yielding peak in\ . At intermediate
frequencies a novel, for HS glasses, double peak in is
revealed reflecting both mechanisms. At high frequencies and strain amplitudes
a persistent structural anisotropy causes a stress drop within the cycle after
strain reversal, while higher stress harmonics are minimized at certain strain
amplitudes indicating an apparent harmonic response.Comment: 4 figures placed at the end with following order: Figure 1, figure 3,
figure 4 and figure
Shear banding and flow-concentration coupling in colloidal glasses
We report experiments on hard sphere colloidal glasses that reveal a type of
shear banding hitherto unobserved in soft glasses. We present a scenario that
relates this to an instability arising from shear-concentration coupling, a
mechanism previously thought unimportant in this class of materials. Below a
characteristic shear rate we observe increasingly non-linear
velocity profiles and strongly localized flows. We attribute this trend to very
slight concentration gradients (likely to evade direct detection) arising in
the unstable flow regime. A simple model accounts for both the observed
increase of with concentration, and the fluctuations observed in
the flow.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
Amorphous and ordered states of concentrated hard spheres under oscillatory shear
Hard sphere colloidal particles are a basic model system to study phase transitions, self-assembly and out-equilibrium states. Experimentally it has been shown that oscillatory shearing of a monodisperse hard sphere glass, produces two different crystal orientations; a face centered cubic (FCC) crystal with the close packed direction parallel to shear at high strains and an FCC crystal with the close packed direction perpendicular to shear at low strains. Here, using Brownian dynamics simulations of hard sphere particles, we have examined high volume fraction shear-induced crystals under oscillatory shear as well their glass counterparts at the same volume fraction. While particle displacements under shear in the glass are almost isotropic, the sheared FCC crystal structures oriented parallel to shear, are anisotropic due to the cooperative motion of velocity–vorticity layers of particles sliding over each other. These sliding layers generally result in lower stresses and less overall particle displacements. Additionally, from the two crystal types, the perpendicular crystal exhibits less stresses and displacements at smaller strains, however at larger strains, the sliding layers of the parallel crystal are found to be more efficient in minimizing stresses and displacements, while the perpendicular crystal becomes unstable. The findings of this work suggest that the process of shear-induced ordering for a colloidal glass is facilitated by large out of cage displacements, which allow the system to explore the energy landscape and find the minima in energy, stresses and displacements by configuring particles into a crystal oriented parallel to shear
Yielding of Hard-Sphere Glasses during Start-Up Shear
Concentrated hard-sphere suspensions and glasses are investigated with rheometry, confocal microscopy, and Brownian dynamics simulations during start-up shear, providing a link between microstructure, dynamics, and rheology. The microstructural anisotropy is manifested in the extension axis where the maximum of the pair-distribution function exhibits a minimum at the stress overshoot. The interplay between Brownian relaxation and shear advection as well as the available free volume determine the structural anisotropy and the magnitude of the stress overshoot. Shear-induced cage deformation induces local constriction, reducing in-cage diffusion. Finally, a superdiffusive response at the steady state, with a minimum of the time-dependent effective diffusivity, reflects a continuous cage breakup and reformation
Wall slip and flow of concentrated hard-sphere colloidal suspensions
We present a comprehensive study of the slip and flow of concentrated
colloidal suspensions using cone-plate rheometry and simultaneous confocal
imaging. In the colloidal glass regime, for smooth, non-stick walls, the solid
nature of the suspension causes a transition in the rheology from
Herschel-Bulkley (HB) bulk flow behavior at large stress to a Bingham-like slip
behavior at low stress, which is suppressed for sufficient colloid-wall
attraction or colloid-scale wall roughness. Visualization shows how the
slip-shear transition depends on gap size and the boundary conditions at both
walls and that partial slip persist well above the yield stress. A
phenomenological model, incorporating the Bingham slip law and HB bulk flow,
fully accounts for the behavior. Microscopically, the Bingham law is related to
a thin (sub-colloidal) lubrication layer at the wall, giving rise to a
characteristic dependence of slip parameters on particle size and
concentration. We relate this to the suspension's osmotic pressure and yield
stress and also analyze the influence of van der Waals interaction. For the
largest concentrations, we observe non-uniform flow around the yield stress, in
line with recent work on bulk shear-banding of concentrated pastes. We also
describe residual slip in concentrated liquid suspensions, where the vanishing
yield stress causes coexistence of (weak) slip and bulk shear flow for all
measured rates
Theory of nonlinear rheology and yielding of dense colloidal suspensions
A first principles approach to the nonlinear flow of dense suspensions is
presented which captures shear thinning of colloidal fluids and dynamical
yielding of colloidal glasses. The advection of density fluctuations plays a
central role, suppressing the caging of particles and speeding up structural
relaxation. A mode coupling approach is developed to explore these effects.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; slightly corrected version; Phys. Rev. Lett., to
be published (2002
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