Issue 44, 2022

Gas–liquid phase separation at zero temperature: mechanical interpretation and implications for gelation

Abstract

The relationship between glasses and gels has been intensely debated for decades; however, the transition between these two phases remains elusive. To investigate a gel formation process in the zero-temperature limit and its relation to the glass phase, we conducted numerical experiments on athermal quasistatic decompression. During decompression, the system experiences a cavitation event similar to phase separation and this is a gelation process at zero temperature. A normal mode analysis revealed that the phase separation is signaled by the vanishing of the lowest eigenenergy, similar to plastic events of glasses under shear. One primary difference from the shear-induced plasticity is that the vanishing mode experiences a qualitative change in its spatial energy distribution at the phase separation point. These findings enable us to define the glass-gel phase boundary based on mechanics.

Graphical abstract: Gas–liquid phase separation at zero temperature: mechanical interpretation and implications for gelation

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
14 May 2022
Accepted
17 Oct 2022
First published
26 Oct 2022

Soft Matter, 2022,18, 8406-8417

Gas–liquid phase separation at zero temperature: mechanical interpretation and implications for gelation

M. Shimada and N. Oyama, Soft Matter, 2022, 18, 8406 DOI: 10.1039/D2SM00628F

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