Brush-mediated angular constraints reshape structure, rigidity, and percolation in colloidal depletion gels
Ziye Zhuang, Robert A. Campbell, Paniz Haghighi, Safa Jamali, and Ali Mohraz

TL;DR
This study reveals that reducing surface-grafted polymer brush density in colloidal gels introduces emergent non-central forces, significantly altering structure, stability, and elasticity, and providing a new control parameter for designing soft materials.
Contribution
It demonstrates a minimal, geometry-preserving method to induce non-central forces via surface brush density, affecting gel mechanics and structure independently of particle anisotropy.
Findings
Increased elastic modulus by nearly threefold.
Suppressed local densification and stabilized low-coordination networks.
Shifted gelation boundaries and altered structural organization.
Abstract
Colloidal gels, like many other soft and disordered solids derive their mechanical properties not only from the strength of interparticle attraction, but also from the symmetry of the forces that constrain particle motion. While non-central interactions are known to profoundly alter rigidity and elasticity, they are typically introduced through particle anisotropy, surface roughness, or patchy interactions, obscuring their independent role. Here we demonstrate a minimal and geometry-preserving route to emergent non-central forces in colloidal gels by reducing the density of surface-grafted polymer brushes. At low brush density, partial brush interpenetration introduces an effective angular bending rigidity at particle contacts, despite fully isotropic particle geometry. This emergent constraint suppresses local densification, stabilizes low-coordination networks, and produces highly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPickering emulsions and particle stabilization · Polymer Surface Interaction Studies · Material Dynamics and Properties
