Normal force controlled rheology applied to agar gelation
Bosi Mao, Thibaut Divoux, Patrick Snabre

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that controlling normal force during rheology measurements of agar gels prevents artifacts caused by volume contraction, leading to more accurate assessment of gel properties and insights into gelation mechanics.
Contribution
It introduces a normal force controlled rheology method to accurately study gelation, addressing volume contraction issues overlooked in traditional constant-volume measurements.
Findings
Normal force control prevents strain hardening during gelation.
Gel elastic modulus depends mainly on final temperature, not cooling rate.
Cryo-EM confirms microstructure consistency regardless of thermal history.
Abstract
A wide range of thermoreversible gels are prepared by cooling down to ambient temperature hot aqueous polymer solutions. During the sol-gel transition, such materials may experience a volume contraction which is traditionally overlooked as rheological measurements are usually performed in geometries of constant volume. In this article, we revisit the formation of 1.5\% wt. agar gels through a series of benchmark rheological experiments performed with a plate-plate geometry. We demonstrate on that particular gel of polysaccharides that the contraction associated with the sol/gel transition cannot be neglected. Indeed, imposing a constant gap width during the gelation results in the strain hardening of the sample, as evidenced by the large negative normal force that develops. Such hardening leads to the slow drift in time of the gel elastic modulus towards ever larger values, and…
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