Abstract

HypothesisHetero-aggregation of oppositely charged colloidal particles with controlled architectural and interactional asymmetry allows modifying gel nanostructure and properties. We hypothesize the relative size ratio between cationic nanospheres and varied-size anionic two-dimensional nanoclays will influence the gel formation mechanisms and resulting rheological performance. ExperimentsHybrid colloidal gels formed via hetero-aggregation of cationic gelatin nanospheres (∼400 nm diameter) and five types of nanoclays with similar 1 nm thickness but different lateral sizes ranging from ∼ 30 nm to ∼ 3000 nm. Structure-property relationships were elucidated using a suite of techniques. Microscopy and scattering probed gel nanostructure and particle configuration. Rheology quantified linear and non-linear viscoelastic properties and yielding behavior. Birefringence and polarized imaging assessed size-dependent nanoclay alignment during shear flow. FindingsNanoclay size ratio relative to nanospheres affected the gelation process, network structure, elasticity, yielding, and shear response. Gels with comparably sized components showed maximum elasticity, while yield stress depended on nanoclay rotational mobility. Shear-induced nanoclay alignment was quantified by birefringence, which is more pronounced for larger nanoclay. Varying nanoclay size and interactions with nanospheres controlled dispersion, aggregation, and nematic ordering. These findings indicate that architectural and interactional asymmetry enables more control over gel properties through controlled assembly of anisotropic building blocks.

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