Snapshotted glass and gel transitions of stable colloidal dispersions after shear-driven aggregation in a microchannel
Abstract
Intense shear can lead to aggregation of colloids that are highly stable at rest. The aggregation process typically has an induction time, and then becomes explosive, leading to rapid phase transitions. We study the phase evolution during shear-driven aggregation in a short microchannel (MC) under intense shear for a colloid with a high interaction energy barrier that ensures high stability of particles and clusters before and after intense shear. The short residence time allows us to snapshot the phase evolution by repeatedly cycling the colloid in the MC. It is found that, depending on the particle concentration, in addition to a fluid of clusters and a solid-like gel, there is another solid-like state between them: Wigner glass of clusters. Their transitions occur over a large range of particle concentrations. We have proposed a phase diagram that describes how the transitions of the three phases evolve in the aggregation steady state in the colloidal interaction vs. particle concentration plane.