Expansion of charged colloids after centrifugation: formation and crystallisation of long-range repulsive glasses

We studied long-range repulsive glasses formed in suspensions of sterically stabilised charged colloidal poly(methyl methacrylate) particles ( sigma = 2.23 mu m) with low polydispersity (4%) in the low-polar solvent cyclohexyl bromide ( epsilon sub(r) = 7.92). Particle interactions were described by...

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Published inSoft matter Vol. 9; no. 48; pp. 11618 - 11633
Main Authors van der Linden, Marjolein N., El Masri, Djamel, Dijkstra, Marjolein, van Blaaderen, Alfons
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.01.2013
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Summary:We studied long-range repulsive glasses formed in suspensions of sterically stabilised charged colloidal poly(methyl methacrylate) particles ( sigma = 2.23 mu m) with low polydispersity (4%) in the low-polar solvent cyclohexyl bromide ( epsilon sub(r) = 7.92). Particle interactions were described by a long-range repulsive Yukawa potential. Glasses were obtained upon compression of the suspensions by centrifugation from a body-centred-cubic crystalline structure at low initial volume fraction ( eta approximately 0.02) to a close-packed amorphous structure ( eta approximately 0.64). Subsequent expansion of the sediment in gravity resulted in long-range repulsive glassy structures with volume fractions eta = 0.16-0.64. The presence of small clusters (mostly dumbbells; clustered fraction f sub(cl) greater than or equal to 0.12) formed by centrifugation prevented the glasses from crystallising for several weeks, while the sediment was still expanding. We used confocal microscopy to obtain three-dimensional datasets of the system and quantitatively analysed the structure of the glasses. The structure of the glasses was found to be remarkably similar to that of hard-sphere glasses, for which experimental data were obtained by centrifugal compression of silica spheres with a hard potential, despite the much longer-range interaction potential. After more than ten weeks the clustered fraction decreased due to spontaneous dissociation of the clusters, and finally bulk crystallisation of the glasses was observed into face-centred-cubic crystals with a volume fraction of around 0.22.
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ISSN:1744-683X
1744-6848
DOI:10.1039/c3sm51752g