Issue 34, 2014

Transient dynamics during stress overshoots in binary colloidal glasses

Abstract

We investigate, using simultaneous rheology and confocal microscopy, the time-dependent stress response and transient single-particle dynamics following a step change in shear rate in binary colloidal glasses with large dynamical asymmetry and different mixing ratios. The transition from solid-like response to flow is characterised by a stress overshoot, whose magnitude is linked to transient superdiffusive dynamics as well as cage compression effects. These and the yield strain at which the overshoot occurs vary with the mixing ratio, and hence the prevailing caging mechanism. The yielding and stress storage are dominated by dynamics on different time and length scales, the short-time in-cage dynamics and the long-time structural relaxation respectively. These time scales and their relation to the characteristic time associated with the applied shear, namely the inverse shear rate, result in two different and distinct regimes of the shear rate dependencies of the yield strain and the magnitude of the stress overshoot.

Graphical abstract: Transient dynamics during stress overshoots in binary colloidal glasses

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
15 Mar 2014
Accepted
17 Jun 2014
First published
17 Jun 2014
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Soft Matter, 2014,10, 6546-6555

Author version available

Transient dynamics during stress overshoots in binary colloidal glasses

T. Sentjabrskaja, M. Hermes, W. C. K. Poon, C. D. Estrada, R. Castañeda-Priego, S. U. Egelhaaf and M. Laurati, Soft Matter, 2014, 10, 6546 DOI: 10.1039/C4SM00577E

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