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SOFT MATTER IN A TIGHT SPOT - NANORHEOLOGY OF CONFINED LIQUIDS AND BLOCK-COPOLYMERS

Author(s)
GRANICK, SDEMIREL, ALCAI, LLPEANASKY, J
Issued Date
1995
DOI
10.1002/ijch.199500013
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/47440
Fulltext
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/ijch.199500013
Citation
ISRAEL JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY, v.35, no.1, pp.75 - 84
Abstract
The linear frequency-dependent shear rheology and force-distance profiles of molecularly-thin fluids of very different structure were contrasted: a globular molecule octamethylcyclotetrasiloxane (OMCTS), branched alkanes (3-methylundecane and squalane), and a polymer brush in near-theta solution (polystyrene-polyvinylpyridine). In each case the data suggest a prolongation of the longest relaxation time (tau(1)) with increasing compression. At frequencies omega > 1/tau(1) the shear response was ''solid-like'', but at omega < 1/tau(1) it was ''liquid-like''. OMCTS under mild compression exhibited seeming power-law viscoelastic behavior with G'(omega) approximate to G ''(omega) over a wide frequency range. Of the branched-molecule fluids, 3-methylundecane exhibited oscillatory force-distance profiles; this confirms prior computer simulations. But squalane (6 pendant methyl groups in an alkane chain 24 carbons long) showed one sole broad attractive minimum. Polymer brushes in a near-theta solvent exhibited changes qualitatively similar to those OMCTS, in particular, a smooth progression of longest relaxation time, generating a transition from ''liquid-like'' to ''solid-like'' shear rheology with decreasing film thickness. The common trend of shear response in these systems, in spite of important differences in molecular structure and force-distance profiles, is emphasized.
Publisher
LASER PAGES PUBL LTD
ISSN
0021-2148
Keyword
STICK-SLIP MOTIONSOLID-SURFACESHYDROCARBON LIQUIDSSOLVATION FORCESPOLYMER MELTSMICA SURFACESTHIN-FILMSSHEARDYNAMICSRHEOLOGY

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