6533b82cfe1ef96bd128ff1f
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Non-equilibrium melting of colloidal crystals in confinement
Hartmut LöwenEnrique Villanova-vidalHans Joachim SchöpeThomas Palbergsubject
Materials scienceMechanical equilibriumHydrostatic pressureFOS: Physical sciencesCondensed Matter - Soft Condensed MatterColloidal crystal010402 general chemistryCondensed Matter Physics01 natural sciences0104 chemical scienceslaw.inventionShear (sheet metal)Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterChemical physicslawCondensed Matter::Superconductivity0103 physical sciencesPhysical SciencesRelaxation (physics)ParticleSoft Condensed Matter (cond-mat.soft)Crystallite010306 general physicsPolarization (electrochemistry)description
International audience; We report on a novel and flexible experiment to investigate the non-equilibrium melting behaviour of model crystals made from charged colloidal spheres. In a slit geometry polycrystalline material formed in a low salt region is driven by hydrostatic pressure up an evolving gradient in salt concentration and melts at large salt concentration. Depending on particle and initial salt concentration, driving velocity and the local salt concentration complex morphologic evolution is observed. Crystal-melt interface positions and the melting velocity are obtained quantitatively from time resolved Bragg- and polarization microscopic measurements. A simple theoretical model predicts the interface to first advance, then for balanced drift and melting velocities to become stationary at a salt concentration larger than the equilibrium melting concentration. It also describes the relaxation of the interface to its equilibrium position in a stationary gradient after stopping the drive in different manners. We further discuss the influence of the gradient strength on the resulting interface morphology and a shear induced morphologic transition from polycrystalline to oriented single crystalline material before melting.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2009-07-13 |