Published August 29, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Dynamic-bond-induced sticky friction tailors non-Newtonian rheology

Description

Frictional network formation has become a new paradigm for understanding the non-Newtonian shear-thickening behavior of dense suspensions. Recent studies have exclusively focused on interparticle friction that instantaneously vanishes when applied shear is ceased. Herein, we investigate a friction that emerges from dynamic chemical bridging of functionalized particle surfaces sheared into close proximity. This enables tailoring of both friction magnitude and the time release of the frictional coupling. The experiments use dense suspensions of thiol-functionalized particles suspended in ditopic polymers endcapped with benzalcyanoacetamide Michael-acceptors. The subsequent room temperature, catalyst-free dynamic thia-Michael reactions can form bridging interactions between the particles with dynamic covalent bonds that linger after formation and release in the absence of shear. This chemical friction mimics physical friction but is stickier, leading to tunable rheopexy. The effect of sticky friction on dense suspension rheology is explored by varying the electronic nature of the benzalcyanoacetamide moiety, the molecular weight of the ditopic polymers, the amount of a competitive bonding compound, and temperature. These results demonstrate how dynamic-bond-induced sticky friction can be used to systematically control the time dependence of the non-Newtonian suspension rheology.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1039/D3SM00479A
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:8347

Funding

National Science Foundation
DMR-2011854
Army Research Laboratory
W911NF-20-2-0044
National Institute of Standards and Technology
70NANB19H005
Army Research Laboratory
W911NF-21-2-0146
Army Research Laboratory
W911NF-21-1-0038

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Physical Sciences Division, Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering
Department(s)
Chemistry, Physics
Center(s) or Institute(s)
James Franck Institute