Hierarchical Dynamics and Time-Length Scale Superposition in Glassy Suspensions of Ultra-Low Crosslinked Microgels
A. Martinelli, R. Elancheliyan, A. Scotti, A. V. Petrunin, D. Truzzolillo, and L. Cipelletti

TL;DR
This study investigates the microscopic structure and dynamics of dense suspensions of ultra-low crosslinked microgels, revealing a universal superposition principle that links relaxation times to length scales across different conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a time-length scale superposition principle for microgel suspensions, demonstrating a universal dynamical behavior across different systems and conditions.
Findings
Microgels act as fragile glass formers with dynamics governed by volume fraction.
An anomalous fast relaxation regime is identified, partly due to laser light absorption.
A master curve for relaxation times across different conditions suggests universal behavior.
Abstract
We employ small-angle X-ray and dynamic light scattering to investigate the microscopic structure and dynamics of dense suspensions of ultra-low crosslinked (ULC) poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) microgels. By probing the supercooled and glassy regimes, we characterize the relationship between structure and dynamics as a function of effective volume fraction and probed length scale. We demonstrate that ULC microgels act as fragile glass formers whose dynamics are governed solely by . In contrast, the microscopic structure depends on the specific combination of microgel number density and swelling state that define . We identify an anomalous glassy regime where relaxation times are orders of magnitude faster than predicted by supercooled extrapolations, and show that in this regime dynamics are partly accelerated by laser light absorption. Finally, we show that the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHydrogels: synthesis, properties, applications · Material Dynamics and Properties · Advanced Physical and Chemical Molecular Interactions
