The Brownian motion of colloidal particles embedded in solutions of hydrogen-bonded supramolecular polymers has been studied using dynamic light scattering. At short times, the motion of the probe particles is diffusive with a diffusion coefficient equal to that in pure solvent. At intermediate time scales the particles are slowed down as a result of trapping in elastic cages formed by the polymer chains, while at longer times the motion is diffusive again, but with a much smaller diffusion coefficient. The influence of particle size and polymer concentration was investigated. The experimental data are compared to a theoretical expression for the mean-square displacement of an embedded particle in a viscoelastic medium, in which the solvent is explicitly taken into account. Differences between the friction and elastic forces experienced by the particle and the macroscopic viscosity and elasticity are explained by the inhomogeneity of the medium on the length scale of the particle size.
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