Leveraging polymer glass transition to access thermally-switchable shear jamming suspensions
ORAL
Abstract
Dense suspensions can exhibit discontinuous shear thickening (DST) and shear jamming (SJ) where interparticle frictional interactions play a vital role in constraining the relative particle motions. Recent studies have shown that these constraints as well as the macroscale rheological properties can be tuned by the particle properties, including roughness and surface chemistry. However, most theoretical and experimental studies have considered hard non-deformable particles, and little is known about the role of particle stiffness. In this work, we have developed a strategy for tunning the stiffness in situ by designing and utilizing polymeric particles with accessible glass transition temperatures (Tg). Around Tg, the elastic modulus of particles depends strongly on temperature and changes by ~3 orders of magnitude. We demonstrate that transitioning through Tg of polymer particles has a dramatic and non-monotonic effect on shear thickening and the shear jamming transition can be turned on or off in situ by varying the temperature relative to Tg. This behavior is attributed to the significant change in mechanical stiffness as well as the inter-particle surface friction near Tg. This study lays the groundwork for switchable jamming systems and motivates further research to investigate how polymer dynamics at the interface can affect the constraints on particle relative motions.
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Publication: Chen C., van de Naald M., Singh A., Dolinski N.D., Jackson G. L., Jureller J., Jaeger H. M., Rowan S. J., de Pablo J. J. Leveraging polymer glass transition to access thermally-switchable shear jamming suspensions (In preparation)
Presenters
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Chuqiao Chen
University of Chicago
Authors
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Chuqiao Chen
University of Chicago
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Michael van de Naald
University of Chicago
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Abhinendra Singh
University of Chicago
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Neil D Dolinski
The University of Chicago, University of Chicago
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Grayson L Jackson
University of Chicago
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Justin Jureller
University of Chicago
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Heinrich M Jaeger
University of Chicago
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Stuart J Rowan
University of Chicago
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Juan De Pablo
University of Chicago, Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering, University of Chicago