Kovacs-like memory effect in a sheared colloidal glass: role of non-affine flows

Abstract

Memory effect reflects a system's ability to encode, retain and retrieve information about its past. Such effects are essentially an out-of-equilibrium phenomenon providing insight into the complex structural and dynamical behavior of the system. Kovacs effect is one such memory effect that is traditionally associated with thermal history. Although studies on the Kovacs-like memory effect have been extended to mechanical perturbations such as compression–decompression, whether such effects can also be observed under volume-conserving perturbations like shear, remains unclear. Combining experiments, simulations and linear response theory we demonstrate Kovacs-like memory effect in a sheared colloidal glass. Moreover, we explore the influence of non-linear perturbations and establish a correlation between the deviation from linear response prediction and microscopic non-affine flows generated due to such large deformations in affecting the memory effect. Our study not only extends Kovacs-like memory effect in the domain of volume-conserving mechanical perturbations, it also highlights the importance of the nature of underlying microscopic flows in controlling the bulk stress relaxation, affecting the Kovacs-like memory effect in amorphous materials.

Graphical abstract: Kovacs-like memory effect in a sheared colloidal glass: role of non-affine flows

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 Dec 2024
Accepted
20 Mar 2025
First published
28 Mar 2025

Soft Matter, 2025, Advance Article

Kovacs-like memory effect in a sheared colloidal glass: role of non-affine flows

M. Mandal, A. Ghadai, R. Mandal and S. Majumdar, Soft Matter, 2025, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D4SM01514B

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