We investigate the transition of the phase separation kinetics from a complete to an arrested liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) in mixtures of bovine γ-globulin with polyethylene glycol (PEG). The solutions feature LLPS with upper critical solution temperature phase behavior. At higher PEG concentrations or low temperatures, non-equilibrium, gel-like states are found. The kinetics is followed during off-critical quenches by ultra-small angle X-ray scattering (USAXS) and very-small angle neutron scattering (VSANS). For shallow quenches a kinetics consistent with classical spinodal decomposition is found, with the characteristic length (ξ) growing with time as ξ ∼ t. For deep quenches, ξ grows only very slowly with a growth exponent smaller than 0.05 during the observation time, indicating an arrested phase separation. For intermediate quench depths, a novel growth kinetics featuring a three-stage coarsening is observed, with an initial classical coarsening, a subsequent slowdown of the growth, and a later resumption of coarsening approaching again ξ ∼ t. Samples featuring the three-stage coarsening undergo a temporarily arrested state. We hypothesize that, while intermittent coarsening and collapse might contribute to the temporary nature of the arrested state, migration-coalescence of the minority liquid phase through the majority glassy phase may be the main mechanism underlying this kinetics, which is also consistent with earlier simulation results.
Assembling nanostructured building blocks into network materials unlocks macroscopic properties inaccessible with monolithic solids, notably toughness and tolerance to electrochemical alloying. A method is reported for large-scale, continuous synthesis of...
The interplay of the glass transition with liquid− liquid phase separation (LLPS) is a subject of intense debate. We use the scattering invariant Q to probe how approaching the glass transition affects the shape of LLPS boundaries in the temperature/volume fraction plane. Two protein systems featuring kinetic arrest with a lower and an upper critical solution temperature phase behavior, respectively, are studied varying the quench depth. Using Q we noninvasively identify system-dependent differences for the effect of glass formation on the LLPS boundary. The glassy dense phase appears to enter the coexistence region for the albumin−YCl 3 system, whereas it follows the equilibrium binodal for the γ-globulin−PEG system.
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