618 research outputs found

    Orientational and induced contributions to the depolarized Rayleigh spectra of liquid and supercooled ortho-terphenyl

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    The depolarized light scattering spectra of the glass forming liquid ortho-terphenyl have been calculated in the low frequency region using molecular dynamics simulation. Realistic system's configurations are produced by using a recent flexible molecular model and combined with two limiting polarizability schemes, both of them using the dipole-induced-dipole contributions at first and second order. The calculated Raman spectral shape are in good agreement with the experimental results in a large temperature range. The analysis of the different contributions to the Raman spectra emphasizes that the orientational and the collision-induced (translational) terms lie on the same time-scale and are of comparable intensity. Moreover, the cross terms are always found to be an important contribution to the scattering intensity.Comment: RevTeX4, 7 pages, 8 eps figure

    Locally preferred structure in simple atomic liquids

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    We propose a method to determine the locally preferred structure of model liquids. This latter is obtained numerically as the global minimum of the effective energy surface of clusters formed by small numbers of particles embedded in a liquid-like environment. The effective energy is the sum of the intra-cluster interaction potential and of an external field that describes the influence of the embedding bulk liquid at a mean-field level. Doing so we minimize the surface effects present in isolated clusters without introducing the full blown geometrical frustration present in bulk condensed phases. We find that the locally preferred structure of the Lennard-Jones liquid is an icosahedron, and that the liquid-like environment only slightly reduces the relative stability of the icosahedral cluster. The influence of the boundary conditions on the nature of the ground-state configuration of Lennard-Jones clusters is also discussed.Comment: RevTeX 4, 17 pages, 6 eps figure

    Liquid stability in a model for ortho-terphenyl

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    We report an extensive study of the phase diagram of a simple model for ortho-terphenyl, focusing on the limits of stability of the liquid state. Reported data extend previous studies of the same model to both lower and higher densities and to higher temperatures. We estimate the location of the homogeneous liquid-gas nucleation line and of the spinodal locus. Within the potential energy landscape formalism, we calculate the distributions of depth, number, and shape of the potential energy minima and show that the statistical properties of the landscape are consistent with a Gaussian distribution of minima over a wide range of volumes. We report the volume dependence of the parameters entering in the Gaussian distribution (amplitude, average energy, variance). We finally evaluate the locus where the configurational entropy vanishes, the so-called Kauzmann line, and discuss the relative location of the spinodal and Kauzmann loci.Comment: RevTeX 4, 8 pages, 8 eps figure

    Disentangling density and temperature effects in the viscous slowing down of glassforming liquids

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    We present a consistent picture of the respective role of density and temperature in the viscous slowing down of glassforming liquids and polymers. Specifically, based in part upon a new analysis of simulation and experimental data on liquid ortho-terphenyl, we conclude that a zeroth-order description of the approach to the glass transition should be formulated in terms of a temperature-driven super-Arrhenius activated behavior rather than a density-driven congestion or jamming phenomenon. The density plays a role at a quantitative level, but its effect on the viscosity and the structural relaxation time can be simply described via a single parameter, an effective interaction energy that is characteristic of the high temperature liquid regime; as a result, density does not affect the ``fragility'' of the glassforming system.Comment: RevTeX4, 8 pages, 8 eps figure

    Molecular dynamics simulation study of the high frequency sound waves in the fragile glass former ortho-terphenyl

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    Using a realistic flexible molecule model of the fragile glass former orthoterphenyl, we calculate via molecular dynamics simulation the collective dynamic structure factor, recently measured in this system by Inelastic X-ray Scattering. The comparison of the simulated and measured dynamic structure factor, and the study of its properties in an extended momentum, frequency and temperature range allows: i) to conclude that the utilized molecular model gives rise to a dynamic structure factor in agreement with the experimental data, for those thermodynamic states and momentum values where the latter are available; ii) to confirm the existence of a slope discontinuity on the T-dependence of the sound velocity that, at finite Q, takes place at a temperature T_x higher than the calorimetric glass transition temperature T_g; iii) to find that the values of T_x is Q-dependent and that its vanishing Q limit is consistent with T_g. The latter finding is interpreted within the framework of the current description of the dynamics of supercooled liquids in terms of exploration of the potential energy landscape.Comment: RevTex, 9 pages, 10 eps figure

    Impact of elastic heterogeneity on the propagation of vibrations at finite temperatures in glasses

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    Some aspects of how sound waves travel through disordered solids are still unclear. Recent work has characterized a feature of disordered solids which seems to influence vibrational excitations at the mesoscales, local elastic heterogeneity. Sound waves propagation has been demonstrated to be strongly affected by inhomogeneous mechanical features of the materials which add to the standard anharmonic couplings, amounting to extremely complex transport properties at finite temperatures. Here, we address these issues for the case of a simple atomic glass former, by Molecular Dynamics computer simulation. In particular, we focus on the transverse components of the vibrational excitations in terms of dynamic structure factors, and characterize the temperature dependence of sound dispersion and attenuation in an extended frequency range. We provide a complete picture of how elastic heterogeneity determines transport of vibrational excitations, also based on a direct comparison of the numerical data with the predictions of the heterogeneous elastic theory.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl

    Dynamic force spectroscopy of DNA hairpins. II. Irreversibility and dissipation

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    We investigate irreversibility and dissipation in single molecules that cooperatively fold/unfold in a two state manner under the action of mechanical force. We apply path thermodynamics to derive analytical expressions for the average dissipated work and the average hopping number in two state systems. It is shown how these quantities only depend on two parameters that characterize the folding/unfolding kinetics of the molecule: the fragility and the coexistence hopping rate. The latter has to be rescaled to take into account the appropriate experimental setup. Finally we carry out pulling experiments with optical tweezers in a specifically designed DNA hairpin that shows two-state cooperative folding. We then use these experimental results to validate our theoretical predictions.Comment: 28 pages, 12 figure

    Vibrational origin of the fast relaxation processes in molecular glass-formers

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    We study the interaction of the relaxation processes with the density fluctuations by molecular dynamics simulation of a flexible molecule model for o-terphenyl (oTP) in the liquid and supercooled phases. We find evidence, besides the structural relaxation, of a secondary vibrational relaxation whose characteristic time, few ps, is slightly temperature dependent. This i) confirms the result by Monaco et al. [Phys. Rev, E 62, 7595 (2000)] of the vibrational nature of the fast relaxation observed in Brillouin Light Scattering (BLS) experiments in oTP; and ii) poses a caveat on the interpretation of the BLS spectra of molecular systems in terms of a purely center of mass dynamics.Comment: RevTeX, 5 pages, 4 eps figure
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