1,913 research outputs found
Can the jamming transition be described using equilibrium statistical mechanics?
When materials such as foams or emulsions are compressed, they display solid
behaviour above the so-called `jamming' transition. Because compression is done
out-of-equilibrium in the absence of thermal fluctuations, jamming appears as a
new kind of a nonequilibrium phase transition. In this proceeding paper, we
suggest that tools from equilibrium statistical mechanics can in fact be used
to describe many specific features of the jamming transition. Our strategy is
to introduce thermal fluctuations and use statistical mechanics to describe the
complex phase behaviour of systems of soft repulsive particles, before sending
temperature to zero at the end of the calculation. We show that currently
available implementations of standard tools such as integral equations,
mode-coupling theory, or replica calculations all break down at low temperature
and large density, but we suggest that new analytical schemes can be developed
to provide a fully microscopic, quantitative description of the jamming
transition.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figs. Talk presented at Statphys24 (July 2010, Cairns,
Australia
Brambilla et al. Reply to a Comment by J. Reinhardt et al. on "Probing the equilibrium dynamics of colloidal hard spheres above the mode-coupling glass transition"
G. Brambilla et al. Reply to a Comment by J. Reinhardt et al. questioning the
existence of equilibrium dynamics above the critical volume fraction of
colloidal hard spheres predicted by mode coupling theory.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev. Lett. Reply to a Comment by J. Reinhardt et
al. (see arXiv:1010.2891), which questions the existence of equilibrium
dynamics above the critical volume fraction of glassy colloidal hard spheres
predicted by mode coupling theor
Estimation of the normal contact stiffness for frictional interface in sticking and sliding conditions
Modeling of frictional contact systems with high accuracy needs the knowledge of several contact parameters, which are mainly related to the local phenomena at the contact interfaces and affect the complex dynamics of mechanical systems in a prominent way. This work presents a newer approach for identifying reliable values of the normal contact stiffness between surfaces in contact, in both sliding and sticking conditions. The combination of experimental tests, on a dedicated set-up, with finite element modeling, allowed for an indirect determination of the normal contact stiffness. The stiffness was found to increase with increasing contact pressure and decreasing roughness, while the evolution of surface topography and third-body rheology affected the contact stiffness when sliding
Compressing nearly hard sphere fluids increases glass fragility
We use molecular dynamics to investigate the glass transition occurring at
large volume fraction, phi, and low temperature, T, in assemblies of soft
repulsive particles. We find that equilibrium dynamics in the (phi, T) plane
obey a form of dynamic scaling in the proximity of a critical point at T=0 and
phi=phi_0, which should correspond to the ideal glass transition of hard
spheres. This glass point, `point G', is distinct from athermal jamming
thresholds. A remarkable consequence of scaling behaviour is that the dynamics
at fixed phi passes smoothly from that of a strong glass to that of a very
fragile glass as phi increases beyond phi_0. Correlations between fragility and
various physical properties are explored.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; Version accepted at Europhys. Let
Criticality in Dynamic Arrest: Correspondence between Glasses and Traffic
Dynamic arrest is a general phenomenon across a wide range of dynamic
systems, but the universality of dynamic arrest phenomena remains unclear. We
relate the emergence of traffic jams in a simple traffic flow model to the
dynamic slow down in kinetically constrained models for glasses. In kinetically
constrained models, the formation of glass becomes a true (singular) phase
transition in the limit . Similarly, using the Nagel-Schreckenberg
model to simulate traffic flow, we show that the emergence of jammed traffic
acquires the signature of a sharp transition in the deterministic limit \pp\to
1, corresponding to overcautious driving. We identify a true dynamical
critical point marking the onset of coexistence between free flowing and jammed
traffic, and demonstrate its analogy to the kinetically constrained glass
models. We find diverging correlations analogous to those at a critical point
of thermodynamic phase transitions.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Subdiffusion and intermittent dynamic fluctuations in the aging regime of concentrated hard spheres
We study the nonequilibrium aging dynamics in a system of quasi-hard spheres
at large density by means of computer simulations. We find that, after a sudden
quench to large density, the relaxation time initially increases exponentially
with the age of the system. After a surprisingly large crossover time, the
system enters the asymptotic aging regime characterized by a linear increase of
the relaxation time with age. In this aging regime, single particle motion is
strongly non-Fickian, with a mean-squared displacement increasing
subdiffusively, associated to broad, non-Gaussian tails in the distribution of
particle displacements. We find that the system ages through temporally
intermittent relaxation events, and a detailed finite size analysis of these
collective dynamic fluctuations reveals that these events are not spanning the
entire system, but remain spatially localized.Comment: 11 pages; 10 fig
Zero Temperature Phase Transition in Spin-ladders: Phase Diagram and Dynamical studies of Cu(Hp)Cl
In a magnetic field, spin-ladders undergo two zero-temperature phase
transitions at the critical fields Hc1 and Hc2. An experimental review of
static and dynamical properties of spin-ladders close to these critical points
is presented. The scaling functions, universal to all quantum critical points
in one-dimension, are extracted from (a) the thermodynamic quantities
(magnetization) and (b) the dynamical functions (NMR relaxation). A simple
mapping of strongly coupled spin ladders in a magnetic field on the exactly
solvable XXZ model enables to make detailed fits and gives an overall
understanding of a broad class of quantum magnets in their gapless phase
(between Hc1 and Hc2). In this phase, the low temperature divergence of the NMR
relaxation demonstrates its Luttinger liquid nature as well as the novel
quantum critical regime at higher temperature. The general behaviour close
these quantum critical points can be tied to known models of quantum magnetism.Comment: few corrections made, 15 pages, to be published in European Journal
of Physics
Fluctuation-dissipation relations in the non-equilibrium critical dynamics of Ising models
We investigate the relation between two-time, multi-spin, correlation and
response functions in the non-equilibrium critical dynamics of Ising models in
d=1 and d=2 spatial dimensions. In these non-equilibrium situations, the
fluctuation-dissipation theorem (FDT) is not satisfied. We find FDT
`violations' qualitatively similar to those reported in various glassy
materials, but quantitatively dependent on the chosen observable, in contrast
to the results obtained in infinite-range glass models. Nevertheless, all FDT
violations can be understood by considering separately the contributions from
large wavevectors, which are at quasi-equilibrium and obey FDT, and from small
wavevectors where a generalized FDT holds with a non-trivial limit
fluctuation-dissipation ratio X. In d=1, we get X = 1/2 for spin observables,
which measure the orientation of domains, while X = 0 for observables that are
sensitive to the domain-wall motion. Numerical simulations in d=2 reveal a
unique X = 0.34 for all observables. Measurement protocols for X are discussed
in detail. Our results suggest that the definition of an effective temperature
Teff = T / X for large length scales is generically possible in non-equilibrium
critical dynamics.Comment: 26 pages, 10 figure
Aging, memory and rejuvenation: some lessons from simple models
Many recent experiments probed the off equilibrium dynamics of spin glasses
and other glassy systems through temperature cycling protocols and observed
memory and rejuvenation phenomena. Here we show through numerical simulations,
using powerful algorithms, that such features can already be observed to some
extent in simple models such as two dimensional ferromagnets. We critically
discuss these results and review some aspects of the literature in the light of
our findings.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures. Contribution to the Proceedings of the
Summerschool "Ageing and the glass transition", Luxembourg 14-25 Sept. 200
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