Study of dynamical heterogeneities in aging colloidal nanoclay suspensions
Paramesh Gadige, Debasish Saha, Sanjay Kumar Behera, and Ranjini, Bandyopadhyay

TL;DR
This study investigates the growth of dynamical heterogeneities in aging Laponite colloidal suspensions using three-point dynamic susceptibility, revealing parallels with supercooled liquids and providing insights into glass-like arrest phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces a formalism to quantify dynamical heterogeneities in aging colloidal suspensions, demonstrating their growth and peak behavior with aging time, akin to supercooled liquids.
Findings
Dynamical heterogeneities grow with aging time
Three-point susceptibility peaks increase with aging
Heterogeneity size initially increases then slows down near arrest
Abstract
An aqueous suspension of the synthetic clay Laponite undergoes a transition from a liquid-like ergodic state to a glass-like nonergodic arrested state. In an observation that closely resembles the dynamical slowdown observed in supercooled liquids, the phenomenon of kinetic arrest in Laponite suspensions is accompanied by a growth in the -relaxation time with increasing sample aging time, . The ubiquitous dynamic slowdown and fragile behavior observed in glass forming liquids approaching the glass transition is typically ascribed to the growth in the size of distinct dynamical heterogeneities. In this article, we present the characterization of the dynamical heterogeneities in aging colloidal Laponite clay systems by invoking the three-point dynamic susceptibility formalism. The average time-dependent two-point intensity autocorrelation and its sensitivity to the control…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMaterial Dynamics and Properties · Clay minerals and soil interactions
