Breadcrumb
- Home
- Publications
- Proceedings
- 2011 Annual Meeting
- Particle Technology Forum
- Particle Technology Awards Lectures
- (605b) Shell Thomas Baron Award In Fluid-Particle Systems - Structure, Slip and Rheology of Soft Particle Glasses
For bulk rheology, I present a micromechanical 3-d model that quantitatively predicts the non-linear rheology of soft particle glasses. The shear stress and the normal stress differences depend on both the dynamic pair distribution function and the solvent-mediated elastohydrodynamic interactions among the deformed particles. The predictions, which have no adjustable parameters, are successfully validated with experiments on concentrated emulsions and polyelectrolyte microgel pastes, highlighting the universality of the flow properties of soft glasses. These results provide a framework for designing new soft additives with a desired rheological response.
The slip and shear banding is due to variations of the structure near the surfaces, which surprisingly propagates hundreds of particle diameters away from the surface. This variation and the resulting flow can be described by a non-local fluidity model. Our results establish a link between surface forces, lubrication and yielding in soft glassy or jammed materials and open new routes to manipulate their flow through the surface chemistry of the confining boundaries.