59 research outputs found
Ergodicity breaking transition in a glassy soft sphere system at small but non-zero temperatures
While the glass transition at non-zero temperature seems to be hard to access
for experimental, theoretical, or simulation studies, jamming at zero
temperature has been explored in great detail. It is a widely discussed
question whether this athermal jamming transition is related to the glass
transition. Motivated by the exploration of the energy landscape that has been
successfully used to describe athermal jamming, we introduce a new method to
determine whether the configuration space of a soft sphere system can be
explored within a reasonable timescale or not, i.e., whether the system is
ergodic or effectively non-ergodic. While in case of athermal jamming for a
given random starting configuration only the local energy minimum is
determined, we allow the thermally excited crossing of energy barriers.
Interestingly, we observe that a transition exists where the system becomes
effectively non-ergodic if the density is increased. In the limit of small but
non-zero temperatures the density where the ergodicity breaking transition
occurs approaches a value that is independent of temperature and below the
transition density of athermal jamming. This confirms recent computer
simulation studies where athermal jamming occurs deep inside the glass phase.
In addition, with our method we determined the critical behavior of the
ergodicity breaking transition and show that it is in the universality class of
directed percolation. Therefore, our approach not only makes the transition
from an ergodic to an effectively non-ergodic systems easily accessible and
helps to reveal its universality class but also shows that it is fundamentally
different from athermal jamming.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figures + 3 supplementary figure
Universal Jamming Phase Diagram in the Hard-Sphere Limit
We present a new formulation of the jamming phase diagram for a class of
glass-forming fluids consisting of spheres interacting via finite-ranged
repulsions at temperature , packing fraction or pressure , and
applied shear stress . We argue that the natural choice of axes for the
phase diagram are the dimensionless quantities ,
, and , where is the temperature, is the
pressure, is the stress, is the sphere diameter,
is the interaction energy scale, and is the sphere mass. We demonstrate
that the phase diagram is universal at low ; at low
pressure, observables such as the relaxation time are insensitive to details of
the interaction potential and collapse onto the values for hard spheres,
provided the observables are non-dimensionalized by the pressure. We determine
the shape of the jamming surface in the jamming phase diagram, organize
previous results in relation to the jamming phase diagram, and discuss the
significance of various limits.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
The thermal jamming transition of soft harmonic disks in two dimensions
By exploring the properties of the energy landscape of a bidisperse system of
soft harmonic disks in two dimensions we determine the thermal jamming
transition. To be specific, we study whether the ground state of the system
where the particle do not overlap can be reached within a reasonable time.
Starting with random initial configurations, the energy landscape is probed by
energy minimization steps as in case of athermal jamming and in addition steps
where an energy barrier can be crossed with a small but non-zero probability.
For random initial conditions we find that as a function of packing fraction
the thermal jamming transition, i.e. the transition from a state where all
overlaps can be removed to an effectively non-ergodic state where one cannot
get rid of the overlaps, occurs at a packing fraction of , which
is smaller than the transition packing fraction of athermal jamming at
. Furthermore, we show that the thermal jamming transition is in
the universality class of directed percolation and therefore is fundamentally
different from the athermal jamming transition.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
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