142 research outputs found

    Absence of `fragility' and mechanical response of jammed granular materials

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    We perform molecular dynamic (MD) simulations of frictional non-thermal particles driven by an externally applied shear stress. After the system jams following a transient flow, we probe its mechanical response in order to clarify whether the resulting solid is 'fragile'. We find the system to respond elastically and isotropically to small perturbations of the shear stress, suggesting absence of fragility. These results are interpreted in terms of the energy landscape of dissipative systems. For the same values of the control parameters, we check the behaviour of the system during a stress cycle. Increasing the maximum stress value, a crossover from a visco-elastic to a plastic regime is observed.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figures, accepted in Granular Matter on 01-02-201

    Pacman Percolation and the Glass Transition

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    We investigate via Monte Carlo simulations the kinetically constrained Kob-Andersen lattice glass model showing that, contrary to current expectations, the relaxation process and the dynamical heterogeneities seems to be characterized by different time scales. Indeed, we found that the relaxation time is related to a reverse percolation transition, whereas the time of maximum heterogeneity is related to the spatial correlation between particles. This investigation leads to a geometrical interpretation of the relaxation processes and of the different observed time scales.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1109.428

    Spatial correlations of elementary relaxation events in glass-forming liquids

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    The dynamical facilitation scenario, by which localized relaxation events promote nearby relaxation events in an avalanching process, has been suggested as the key mechanism connecting the microscopic and the macroscopic dynamics of structural glasses. Here we investigate the statistical features of this process via the numerical simulation of a model structural glass. First we show that the relaxation dynamics of the system occurs through particle jumps that are irreversible, and that cannot be decomposed in smaller irreversible events. Then we show that each jump does actually trigger an avalanche. The characteristic of this avalanche change on cooling, suggesting that the relaxation dynamics crossovers from a noise dominated regime where jumps do not trigger other relaxation events, to a regime dominated by the facilitation process, where a jump trigger more relaxation events.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure

    Particle jumps in structural glasses

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    Particles in structural glasses rattle around temporary equilibriumpositions, that seldom change through a process which is much faster than the relaxation time, known as particle jump. Since the relaxation of the system is due to the accumulation of many such jumps, it could be possible to connect the single particle short time motion to the macroscopic relaxation by understanding the features of the jump dynamics. Here we review recent results in this research direction, clarifying the features of particles jumps that have been understood and those that are still under investigation, and examining the role of particle jumps in different theories of the glass transition.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, Review articl

    Cage Size and Jump Precursors in Glass-Forming Liquids: Experiment and Simulations

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    Glassy dynamics is intermittent, as particles suddenly jump out of the cage formed by their neighbours, and heterogeneous, as these jumps are not uniformly distributed across the system. Relating these features of the dynamics to the diverse local environments explored by the particles is essential to rationalize the relaxation process. Here we investigate this issue characterizing the local environment of a particle with the amplitude of its short time vibrational motion, as determined by segmenting in cages and jumps the particle trajectories. Both simulations of supercooled liquids and experiments on colloidal suspensions show that particles in large cages are likely to jump after a small time-lag, and that, on average, the cage enlarges shortly before the particle jumps. At large time-lags, the cage has essentially a constant value, which is smaller for longer-lasting cages. Finally, we clarify how this coupling between cage size and duration controls the average behaviour and opens the way to a better understanding of the relaxation process in glass--forming liquids.Comment: Letter, 4 figure

    Glassy dynamics of a polymer monolayer on a heterogeneous disordered substrate

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    We present molecular dynamics simulations of a polymer monolayer on randomly functionalized surfaces that are characterized by different fractions of weakly and strongly attractive sites. We show that the dynamics slow-down upon cooling resembles that of a strong glass-forming liquid. Indeed, the mean-square displacements show an increasingly lasting subdiffusive behaviour before the diffusive regime, with signs of Fickian yet not Gaussian diffusion, and the dynamic correlation functions exhibit a stretched exponential decay. The glassy dynamics of this relatively dilute system is dominated by the interaction of the polymer with the substrate and becomes more marked when the substrate composition is heterogeneous. Accordingly, the estimated glass transition temperature shows a non-monotic dependence on surface composition, in agreement with previous results for the activation energy and with an analysis of the potential energy landscape experienced by the polymer beads. Our findings are relevant to the description of polymer–surface adhesion and friction and the development of polymer nanocomposites with tailored structural and mechanical properties

    Concentrated suspensions of Brownian beads in water: dynamic heterogeneities trough a simple experimental technique

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    Concentrated suspensions of Brownian hard-spheres in water are an epitome for understanding the glassy dynamics of both soft materials and supercooled molecular liquids. From an experimental point of view, such systems are especially suited to perform particle tracking easily, and, therefore, are a benchmark for novel optical techniques, applicable when primary particles cannot be resolved. Differential Variance Analysis (DVA) is one such novel technique that simplifies significantly the characterization of structural relaxation processes of soft glassy materials, since it is directly applicable to digital image sequences of the sample. DVA succeeds in monitoring not only the average dynamics, but also its spatio-temporal fluctuations, known as dynamic heterogeneities. In this work, we study the dynamics of dense suspensions of Brownian beads in water, imaged through digital video-microscopy, by using both DVA and single-particle tracking. We focus on two commonly used signatures of dynamic heterogeneities: the dynamic susceptibility, χ4\chi_4, and the non-Gaussian parameter, α2\alpha_2. By direct comparison of these two quantities, we are able to highlight similarities and differences. We do confirm that χ4\chi_4 and α2\alpha_2 provide qualitatively similar information, but we find quantitative discrepancies in the scalings of characteristic time and length scale on approaching the glass transition.Comment: The original publication is available at http://www.scichina.com and http://www.springerlink.com http://engine.scichina.com/publisher/scp/journal/SCPMA/doi/10.1007/s11433-019-9401-x?slug=abstrac

    Cage-jump motion reveals universal dynamics and non-universal structural features in glass forming liquids

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    The sluggish and heterogeneous dynamics of glass forming liquids is frequently associated to the transient coexistence of two phases of particles, respectively with an high and low mobility. In the absence of a dynamical order parameter that acquires a transient bimodal shape, these phases are commonly identified empirically, which makes difficult investigating their relation with the structural properties of the system. Here we show that the distribution of single particle diffusivities can be accessed within a Continuous Time Random Walk description of the intermittent motion, and that this distribution acquires a transient bimodal shape in the deeply supercooled regime, thus allowing for a clear identification of the two coexisting phase. In a simple two-dimensional glass forming model, the dynamic phase coexistence is accompanied by a striking structural counterpart: the distribution of the crystalline-like order parameter becomes also bimodal on cooling, with increasing overlap between ordered and immobile particles. This simple structural signature is absent in other models, such as the three-dimesional Kob-Andersen Lennard-Jones mixture, where more sophisticated order parameters might be relevant. In this perspective, the identification of the two dynamical coexisting phases opens the way to deeper investigations of structure-dynamics correlations.Comment: Published in the J. Stat. Mech. Special Issue "The Role of Structure in Glassy and Jammed Systems

    Dynamical Correlation Length and Relaxation Processes in a Glass Former

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    We investigate the relaxation process and the dynamical heterogeneities of the kinetically constrained Kob--Anderson lattice glass model, and show that these are characterized by different timescales. The dynamics is well described within the diffusing defect paradigm, which suggest to relate the relaxation process to a reverse--percolation transition. This allows for a geometrical interpretation of the relaxation process, and of the different timescales
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