Issue 46, 2023

Stress-independent delay time in yielding of dilute colloidal gels

Abstract

We investigate the yielding under shear for dilute poly(N-isopropyl acrylamide-co-fumaric acid) (PNIPAM-FAc) colloidal gels obtained above the volume phase transition temperature. In this temperature range, the microgel suspensions form colloidal gels due to hydrophobic interparticle interactions under appropriate pH and ionic strength conditions. Step-strain tests revealed that yielding occurs when the applied strain exceeds a specific threshold, requiring a finite, stress-independent delay time (tD). This is distinct from previous findings on delayed yielding in other colloidal gels, where tD decreases with increasing stress. In the start-up shear tests, yield strain (γy) at a higher strain rate ([small gamma, Greek, dot above]) increases with escalating [small gamma, Greek, dot above], while γy at lower [small gamma, Greek, dot above] remains constant. This characteristic γy[small gamma, Greek, dot above] relationship is successfully explained by a simple model using the stress-independent tD value without an adjustable fitting parameter. The distinctive yielding behavior, underscored by a stress-independent tD, is expected to originate from strain-induced macroscopic phase separation into a dense colloidal gel and water, observable separately from rheological measurements.

Graphical abstract: Stress-independent delay time in yielding of dilute colloidal gels

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
17 Sep 2023
Accepted
13 Nov 2023
First published
21 Nov 2023

Soft Matter, 2023,19, 9082-9091

Stress-independent delay time in yielding of dilute colloidal gels

A. Yamamoto, T. Inui, D. Suzuki and K. Urayama, Soft Matter, 2023, 19, 9082 DOI: 10.1039/D3SM01238G

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