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      Tuning colloidal gels by shear

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          Abstract

          Using a powerful combination of experiments and simulations we demonstrate how the microstructure and its time evolution are linked with mechanical properties in a frustrated, out-of-equilibrium, particle gel under shear.

          Abstract

          Using a powerful combination of experiments and simulations we demonstrate how the microstructure and its time evolution are linked with mechanical properties in a frustrated, out-of-equilibrium, particle gel under shear. An intermediate volume fraction colloid–polymer gel is used as a model system, allowing quantification of the interplay between interparticle attractions and shear forces. Rheometry, confocal microscopy and Brownian dynamics reveal that high shear rates, fully breaking the structure, lead after shear cessation to more homogeneous and stronger gels, whereas preshear at low rates creates largely heterogeneous weaker gels with reduced elasticity. We find that in comparison, thermal quenching cannot produce structural inhomogeneities under shear. We argue that external shear has strong implications on routes towards metastable equilibrium, and therefore gelation scenarios. Moreover, these results have strong implications for material design and industrial applications, such as mixing, processing and transport protocols coupled to the properties of the final material.

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          On Interaction between Two Bodies Immersed in a Solution of Macromolecules

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            Photonic structures in biology.

            Millions of years before we began to manipulate the flow of light using synthetic structures, biological systems were using nanometre-scale architectures to produce striking optical effects. An astonishing variety of natural photonic structures exists: a species of Brittlestar uses photonic elements composed of calcite to collect light, Morpho butterflies use multiple layers of cuticle and air to produce their striking blue colour and some insects use arrays of elements, known as nipple arrays, to reduce reflectivity in their compound eyes. Natural photonic structures are providing inspiration for technological applications.
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              Jamming is not just cool any more

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                SMOABF
                Soft Matter
                Soft Matter
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                1744-683X
                1744-6848
                2015
                2015
                : 11
                : 23
                : 4640-4648
                Affiliations
                [1 ]FORTH/IESL and Department of Materials Science and Technology
                [2 ]University of Crete
                [3 ]71110 Heraklion, Greece
                [4 ]School of Physics and Astronomy
                [5 ]University of Edinburgh
                [6 ]Edinburgh EH9 3JZ, UK
                [7 ]Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering
                [8 ]California Institute of Technology
                [9 ]Pasadena, USA
                Article
                10.1039/C5SM00411J
                25962849
                fa0acdb0-a8c1-4f0c-9ef9-75292aac9f88
                © 2015
                History

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