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Dynamical Arrest, Percolation, Gelation, and Glass Formation in Model Nanoparticle Dispersions with Thermoreversible Adhesive Interactions
Published
Author(s)
Aaron Paul Rust Eberle, Ramon Castaneda-Priego, Jung M. Kim, Norman J. Wagner
Abstract
We report an experimental study of the dynamical arrest transition for a model system consisting of octadecyl coated silica suspended in n-tetradecane from dilute to concentrated conditions spanning the state diagram. The dispersion's interparticle potential is tuned by temperature affecting the brush conformation leading to a thermoreversible model system. The dynamical arrest transition temperature, T*, is determined as a function of dispersion volume fraction by small-amplitude dynamic oscillatory shear (SAOS) rheology. We corroborate this transition temperature by measuring a power-law decay of the autocorrelation function and a loss of ergodicity via fiber-optic quasi-elastic light scattering (FOQELS). The structure at T* is measured using small-angle neutron scattering (SANS). The scattering intensity is fit to extract the interparticle pair-potential using the Ornstein-Zernike equation with the Percus-Yevick closure approximation, assuming a square well interaction potential with a short range interaction (1% of particle diameter).1 The strength of attraction is characterized using the Baxter temperature2 and mapped onto the adhesive hard sphere (AHS) state diagram. The experiments show a continuous dynamical arrest transition line that follows the predicted dynamical percolation line until 0.41 where it subtends the predictions toward the mode coupling theory (MCT) attractive-driven glass (ADG) line. An alternative analysis of the phase transition through the reduced second virial coefficient B2* shows a change in the functional dependence of B2* on particle concentration around 0.36. We propose this signifies the location of a gel-to-glass transition. The results presented herein differ from those observed for depletion flocculated dispersion of micron-sized particles in polymer solutions, where dynamical arrest is a consequence of multicomponent phase separation, suggesting dynamical arrest is sensitive to the physical mechanism of attraction.
Eberle, A.
, Castaneda-Priego, R.
, Kim, J.
and Wagner, N.
(2012),
Dynamical Arrest, Percolation, Gelation, and Glass Formation in Model Nanoparticle Dispersions with Thermoreversible Adhesive Interactions, Langmuir, [online], https://doi.org/10.1021/la2035054, https://tsapps.nist.gov/publication/get_pdf.cfm?pub_id=909486
(Accessed October 11, 2025)