Structure and short-time diffusion of concentrated suspensions consisting of silicone-stabilised PMMA particles: a quantitative analysis taking polydispersity effects into account

We characterise structure and dynamics of concentrated suspensions of silicone-stabilised PMMA particles immersed in index-matching decalin-tetralin mixtures by means of static and quasielastic light scattering experiments. These particles can reproducibly be prepared via a comparatively easy route...

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Veröffentlicht in:Soft matter 2024-02, Vol.2 (6), p.139-1319
Hauptverfasser: Diaz Maier, Joel, Wagner, Joachim
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We characterise structure and dynamics of concentrated suspensions of silicone-stabilised PMMA particles immersed in index-matching decalin-tetralin mixtures by means of static and quasielastic light scattering experiments. These particles can reproducibly be prepared via a comparatively easy route and are thus promising model systems with hard-sphere interaction. We demonstrate the hard-sphere behaviour of dense suspensions of these systems rigorously taking polydispersity effects into account. Structure factors S ( Q ) can in the entire range of volume fractions with liquid-like structure quantitatively be modelled using a multi-component Percus-Yevick ansatz regarding the particle size distribution and the form factor assuming a core-shell model with a scattering length density gradient in the PMMA core. Herewith, hydrodynamic functions H ( Q ) are in the whole accessible Q -range beyond the second maximum of H ( Q ) quantitatively modelled using a rescaled δγ-approach for all investigated volume fractions. With these data, previously provided characterisation of dilute systems is extended: the excellent agreement of structural and dynamic properties with theoretical predictions for hard spheres demonstrates the suitability of these particles as a model system for hard spheres. We characterise silicone-stabilised PMMA particles as a hard-sphere model system. Employing light scattering, structure and collective diffusion of these particles are investigated and compared to theoretical predictions for hard-sphere systems.
ISSN:1744-683X
1744-6848
DOI:10.1039/d3sm01510f