1,656 research outputs found
Critical Dynamics in Glassy Systems
Critical dynamics in various glass models including those described by mode
coupling theory is described by scale-invariant dynamical equations with a
single non-universal quantity, i.e. the so-called parameter exponent that
determines all the dynamical critical exponents. We show that these equations
follow from the structure of the static replicated Gibbs free energy near the
critical point. In particular the exponent parameter is given by the ratio
between two cubic proper vertexes that can be expressed as six-point cumulants
measured in a purely static framework.Comment: 24 pages, accepted for publication on PRE. Discussion of the
connection with MCT added in the Conclusion
Colloidal glass transition: Beyond mode-coupling theory
A new theory for dynamics of concentrated colloidal suspensions and the
colloidal glass transition is proposed. The starting point is the memory
function representation of the density correlation function. The memory
function can be expressed in terms of a time-dependent pair-density correlation
function. An exact, formal equation of motion for this function is derived and
a factorization approximation is applied to its evolution operator. In this way
a closed set of equations for the density correlation function and the memory
function is obtained. The theory predicts an ergodicity breaking transition
similar to that predicted by the mode-coupling theory, but at a higher density.Comment: to be published in PR
A Double-Transition Scenario for Anomalous Diffusion in Glass-Forming Mixtures
We study by molecular dynamics computer simulation a binary soft-sphere
mixture that shows a pronounced decoupling of the species' long-time dynamics.
Anomalous, power-law-like diffusion of small particles arises, that can be
understood as a precursor of a double-transition scenario, combining a glass
transition and a separate small-particle localization transition. Switching off
small-particle excluded-volume constraints slows down, rather than enhances,
small-particle transport. The data are contrasted with results from the
mode-coupling theory of the glass transition
Critical Decay at Higher-Order Glass-Transition Singularities
Within the mode-coupling theory for the evolution of structural relaxation in
glass-forming systems, it is shown that the correlation functions for density
fluctuations for states at A_3- and A_4-glass-transition singularities can be
presented as an asymptotic series in increasing inverse powers of the logarithm
of the time t: , where
with p_n denoting some polynomial and x=ln (t/t_0). The results are
demonstrated for schematic models describing the system by solely one or two
correlators and also for a colloid model with a square-well-interaction
potential.Comment: 26 pages, 7 figures, Proceedings of "Structural Arrest Transitions in
Colloidal Systems with Short-Range Attractions", Messina, Italy, December
2003 (submitted
Tests of mode coupling theory in a simple model for two-component miscible polymer blends
We present molecular dynamics simulations on the structural relaxation of a
simple bead-spring model for polymer blends. The introduction of a different
monomer size induces a large time scale separation for the dynamics of the two
components. Simulation results for a large set of observables probing density
correlations, Rouse modes, and orientations of bond and chain end-to-end
vectors, are analyzed within the framework of the Mode Coupling Theory (MCT).
An unusually large value of the exponent parameter is obtained. This feature
suggests the possibility of an underlying higher-order MCT scenario for dynamic
arrest.Comment: Revised version. Additional figures and citation
Asymptotic analysis of mode-coupling theory of active nonlinear microrheology
We discuss a schematic model of mode-coupling theory for force-driven active
nonlinear microrheology, where a single probe particle is pulled by a constant
external force through a dense host medium. The model exhibits both a glass
transition for the host, and a force-induced delocalization transition, where
an initially localized probe inside the glassy host attains a nonvanishing
steady-state velocity by locally melting the glass. Asymptotic expressions for
the transient density correlation functions of the schematic model are derived,
valid close to the transition points. There appear several nontrivial time
scales relevant for the decay laws of the correlators. For the nonlinear
friction coeffcient of the probe, the asymptotic expressions cause various
regimes of power-law variation with the external force, and two-parameter
scaling laws.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figure
Glass Dynamics at High Strain Rates
We present a shear-transformation-zone (STZ) theoretical analysis of
molecular-dynamics simulations of a rapidly sheared metallic glass. These
simulations are especially revealing because, although they are limited to high
strain rates, they span temperatures ranging from well below to well above the
glass transition. With one important discrepancy, the STZ theory reproduces the
simulation data, including the way in which those data can be made to collapse
onto simple curves by a scaling transformation. The STZ analysis implies that
the system's behavior at high strain rates is controlled primarily by
effective-temperature thermodynamics, as opposed to system-specific details of
the molecular interactions. The discrepancy between theory and simulations
occurs at the lower strain rates for temperatures near the glass transition. We
argue that this discrepancy can be resolved by the same multi-species
generalization of STZ theory that has been proposed recently for understanding
frequency-dependent viscoelastic responses, Stokes-Einstein violations, and
stretched-exponential relaxation in equilibrated glassy materials.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
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