Issue 9, 2018

Polyelectrolyte scaling laws for microgel yielding near jamming

Abstract

Micro-scale hydrogel particles, known as microgels, are used in industry to control the rheology of numerous different products, and are also used in experimental research to study the origins of jamming and glassy behavior in soft-sphere model systems. At the macro-scale, the rheological behaviour of densely packed microgels has been thoroughly characterized; at the particle-scale, careful investigations of jamming, yielding, and glassy-dynamics have been performed through experiment, theory, and simulation. However, at low packing fractions near jamming, the connection between microgel yielding phenomena and the physics of their constituent polymer chains has not been made. Here we investigate whether basic polymer physics scaling laws predict macroscopic yielding behaviours in packed microgels. We measure the yield stress and cross-over shear-rate in several different anionic microgel systems prepared at packing fractions just above the jamming transition, and show that our data can be predicted from classic polyelectrolyte physics scaling laws. We find that diffusive relaxations of microgel deformation during particle re-arrangements can predict the shear-rate at which microgels yield, and the elastic stress associated with these particle deformations predict the yield stress.

Graphical abstract: Polyelectrolyte scaling laws for microgel yielding near jamming

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
30 Jul 2017
Accepted
06 Feb 2018
First published
06 Feb 2018

Soft Matter, 2018,14, 1559-1570

Polyelectrolyte scaling laws for microgel yielding near jamming

T. Bhattacharjee, C. P. Kabb, C. S. O’Bryan, J. M. Urueña, B. S. Sumerlin, W. G. Sawyer and T. E. Angelini, Soft Matter, 2018, 14, 1559 DOI: 10.1039/C7SM01518F

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