Effects of polydispersity on the glass transition dynamics of aqueous suspensions of soft spherical colloidal particles
Sanjay Kumar Behera, Debasish Saha, Paramesh Gadige, Ranjini, Bandyopadhyay

TL;DR
This study investigates how polydispersity affects the glass transition and rheological behavior of soft colloidal suspensions, revealing increased fragility and heterogeneity with higher polydispersity.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence linking polydispersity to changes in fragility, dynamical heterogeneities, and nonlinear rheology in soft colloidal glasses.
Findings
Fragility increases with polydispersity.
Dynamical heterogeneities are more prevalent at higher PDIs.
Nonlinear rheological response grows with polydispersity.
Abstract
Thermoresponsive poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) particles of a nearly constant swelling ratio and with polydispersity indices (PDIs) varying over a wide range (7.4% - 48.9%) are synthesized to study the effects of polydispersity on the dynamics of suspensions of soft PNIPAM colloidal particles. The PNIPAM particles are characterized using dynamic light scattering (DLS) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The zero shear viscosity () data of these colloidal suspensions, estimated from rheometric experiments as a function of the effective volume fraction of the suspensions, increases with increase in and shows a dramatic increase at . The data for as a function of fits well to the Vogel-Fulcher-Tammann (VFT) equation. It is observed that increasing PDIs results in increasingly fragile supercooled…
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