L Wilson, R Besseling, J Arlt, and W CK Poon (2006)
Linear and nonlinear microrheology of dense colloidal suspensions
In: Optical Trapping and Optical Micromanipulation III. SPIE, San Diego, pages 63261P.
The length and time scales accessible to optical tweezers make them an ideal tool for the examination of colloidal systems. Embedded
high-refractive-index tracer particles in an index-matched hard sphere suspension provide 'handles' within the system to investigate the
mechanical behaviour. Passive observations of the motion of a single probe particle give information about the linear response behaviour of
the system, which can be linked to the macroscopic frequrency-dependent viscous and elastic moduli of the suspension. Separate 'dragging'
experiments allow observation of a sample's nonlinear response to an applied stress on a particle-by particle basis. Optical force
measurements have given new data about the dynamics of phase transitions and particle interactions; an example in this study is the
transition from liquid-like to solid-like behaviour, and the emergence of a yield stress and other effects attributable to nearest-neighbour
caging effects. The forces needed to break such cages and the frequency of these cage breaking events are investigated in detail for systems
close to the glass transition.
Conference on Optical Trapping and Optical Micromanipulation III, AUG 13-17, 2006, San Diego, CA