Abstract

Optical video microscopy and digital image processing have been used to study the self-diffusion of colloidal particles with a hard-sphere potential. The colloid particles consist of cross-linked polymers and are dispersed in a good solvent to avoid aggregation. To investigate single particle motion in highly concentrated dispersions, a host−tracer system, consisting of two different kinds of polymer particles, has been designed: the host particles are made of poly-t-butylacrylate (with ethanedioldiacrylate as cross-linker) and have the same refractive index as the employed solvent, 4-fluorotoluene. The tracer particles have a core−shell structure with a polystyrene core (cross-linked with m-diisopropenylbenzene) and a shell consisting of cross-linked poly-t-butylacrylate to match surface properties and interaction potential to those of the “invisible” particles. The motion of the strongly scattering core−shell particles (“tracer” particles) was observed by dark-field light microscopy. From the obtained ...

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