Controlling the volume fraction of glass-forming colloidal suspensions using thermosensitive host `mesogels'

Abstract

The key parameter controlling the glass transition of colloidal suspensions is , the fraction of the sample volume occupied by the particles. Unfortunately, changing by varying an external parameter, e.g. temperature T as in molecular glass formers, is not possible, unless one uses thermosensitive colloidal particles, like the popular poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNiPAM) microgels. These however have several drawbacks, including high deformability, osmotic deswelling and interpenetration, which complicate their use as a model system to study the colloidal glass transition. Here, we propose a new system consisting of a colloidal suspension of non-deformable spherical silica nanoparticles, in which PNiPAM hydrogel spheres of ~100-200 μ m size are suspended. These non-colloidal `mesogels' allow for controlling the sample volume effectively available to the silica nanoparticles and hence their , thanks to the T-induced change in mesogels volume. Using optical microscopy, we first show that the mesogels retain their ability to change size with T when suspended in Ludox suspensions, similarly as in water. We then show that their size is independent of the sample thermal history, such that a well-defined, reversible relationship between T and may be established. Finally, we use space-resolved dynamic light scattering to demonstrate that, upon varying T, our system exhibits a broad range of dynamical behaviors across the glass transition and beyond, comparable with those exhibited by a series of distinct silica nanoparticle suspensions of various .

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