Abstract
Several studies on colloidal depletion systems have reported the existence of a fluid phase consisting of clusters of particles above a critical polymer concentration that acts as a precursor regime to the gel phase at low colloid volume fractions (phi<or=0.20) . The clusters are found to be stable against further aggregation suggesting that individual particles are localized within a cluster. However the clusters themselves behave as distinct entities in an equilibrium fluid phase. In this study, we probe the internal microstructure of the cluster entities by ultrasmall angle x-ray scattering (USAXS) techniques. These studies reveal that over the accessible length scales, the microstructure of the particle clusters are similar to that observed in dense space-spanning depletion gels. The origin of these clusters is unclear but the scattering patterns as they settle with time reveal that the percolation of the clusters to form space-spanning gels does not influence their internal microstructure. These observations lend support to the hypothesis that the formation of space-spanning depletion gels at a given volume fraction is driven by the percolation of the particle clusters. Settling experiments at phi=0.08 also provide rough estimates of the cluster sizes that appear consistent with the observations from the USAXS experiments.
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