Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7850717 | Carbon | 2016 | 26 Pages |
Abstract
Understanding the mechanical properties of ultra-thin films formed by the self-assembly of molecules/nanoparticles/colloids at fluid-fluid interfaces is central to many technological applications. Here, we have carried out interfacial rheology measurements to systematically investigate the concentration dependent viscoelastic response of 2D films of Fullerene C60 at the air-water interface. With increasing C60 concentration, amplitude sweep measurements show that the films undergo a transition from viscoelastic liquid-like to viscoelastic solid-like behaviour. Interestingly, for high C60 concentrations's, the loss modulus Gâ²â² reaches a maximum before the onset of power-law shear-thinning in Gâ², the storage modulus, and Gâ²â². The power-law exponents have a ratio 2. This response is typical of systems that show soft glassy behaviour. We also observe a power-law increase in Gâ² and Gâ²â² at low frequencies in the frequency response measurements and a transition from Newtonian to shear-thinning behaviour, with increasing shear rate, in steady shear measurements. Our results are in qualitative agreement with the phenomenological soft glassy rheology model.
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Authors
V. Santhosh, R. Voggu, P. Chaturbedy, Rajesh Ganapathy, C.N.R. Rao,