154 research outputs found

    Dynamics and structure of an aging binary colloidal glass

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    We study aging in a colloidal suspension consisting of micron-sized particles in a liquid. This system is made glassy by increasing the particle concentration. We observe samples composed of particles of two sizes, with a size ratio of 1:2.1 and a volume fraction ratio 1:6, using fast laser scanning confocal microscopy. This technique yields real-time, three-dimensional movies deep inside the colloidal glass. Specifically, we look at how the size, motion and structural organization of the particles relate to the overall aging of the glass. Particles move in spatially heterogeneous cooperative groups. These mobile regions tend to be richer in small particles, and these small particles facilitate the motion of nearby particles of both sizes.Comment: 7 pages; submitted to Phys. Rev. E. Revised with 1 new figure, improved tex

    Molecular motion in concentrated solutions of spherical polystyrene microgels studied with the pulsed field gradient n.m.r.

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    Results of a pulsed field gradient n.m.r. study of the motion of swollen spherical microgels in solution are presented. We have measured the echo attenuation (or the incoherent dynamic structure function) of the protons in the microgels in the dynamic range from qR≪1 up to qR ≈ 1.8 (where q=scattering vector and R = particle radius), and in the timescale from a few milliseconds up to 100 ms. Rotational diffusion of the microgel spheres could not be detected with certainty. However, restricted diffusion of the spheres within a cage was observed, in particular for the large microgel with R =125 nm, where the short-time diffusion could be monitored. For apparent volume fractions (φ > 0.6, the diffusion is restricted within a space scale of root mean square displacement, 〈z2〉 1 2 120 nm. With increasing volume fraction of the microgels in solution, (φ > 0.6, the diffusion becomes increasingly restricted. This crossover corresponds to the dynamic glass transition observed by Bartsch et al. for a similar system using quasielastic light scattering. © 1994

    Segmental relaxation in semicrystalline polymers: a mean field model for the distribution of relaxation times in confined regimes

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    The effect of confinement in the segmental relaxation of polymers is considered. On the basis of a thermodynamic model we discuss the emerging relevance of the fast degrees of freedom in stimulating the much slower segmental relaxation, as an effect of the constraints at the walls of the amorphous regions. In the case that confinement is due to the presence of crystalline domains, a quasi-poissonian distribution of local constraining conditions is derived as a result of thermodynamic equilibrium. This implies that the average free energy barrier ΔF\Delta F for conformational rearrangement is of the same order of the dispersion of the barrier heights, δ(ΔF)\delta (\Delta F), around ΔF\Delta F. As an example, we apply the results to the analysis of the α\alpha-relaxation as observed by dielectric broad band spectroscopy in semicrystalline poly(ethylene terephthalate) cold-crystallized from either an isotropic or an oriented glass. It is found that in the latter case the regions of cooperative rearrangement are significantly larger than in the former.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures .ep

    Reply to ``Comment on `Hole-burning experiments within glassy models with infinite range interactions' ''

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    This is a reply to the comments by Richter and Chamberlin, and Diezemann and Bohmer to our paper (Phys. Rev. Lett. 85, 3448 (2000)). As further evidence for the claims in this Letter, we here reproduce the nonlinear spectral hole-burning experimental protocol in an equilibrated fully connected spin-glass model and we exhibit frequency selectivity, together with a shift in the base of the spectral hole.Comment: 1 page, two figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let

    Sticky Spheres, Entropy barriers and Non-equilibrium phase transitions

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    A sticky spheres model to describe slow dynamics of a non-equilibrium system is proposed. The dynamical slowing down is due to the presence of entropy barriers. We present an exact mean field analysis of the model and demonstrate that there is a non-equilibrium phase transition from an exponential cluster size distribution to a powerlaw.Comment: 10pages text and 2 figure

    Hole-burning experiments within solvable glassy models

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    We reproduce the results of non-resonant spectral hole-burning experiments with fully-connected (equivalently infinite-dimensional) glassy models that are generalizations of the mode-coupling approach to nonequilibrium situations. We show that an ac-field modifies the integrated linear response and the correlation function in a way that depends on the amplitude and frequency of the pumping field. We study the effect of the waiting and recovery-times and the number of oscillations applied. This calculation will help descriminating which results can and which cannot be attributed to dynamic heterogeneities in real systems.Comment: 4 pages, 8 figures, RevTe

    Dynamic heterogeneities in the out-of-equilibrium dynamics of simple spherical spin models

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    The response of spherical two-spin interaction models, the spherical ferromagnet (s-FM) and the spherical Sherrington-Kirkpatrick (s-SK) model, is calculated for the protocol of the so-called nonresonant hole burning experiment (NHB) for temperatures below the respective critical temperatures. It is shown that it is possible to select dynamic features in the out-of-equilibrium dynamics of both models, one of the hallmarks of dynamic heterogeneities. The behavior of the s-SK model and the s-FM in three dimensions is very similar, showing dynamic heterogeneities in the long time behavior, i.e. in the aging regime. The appearence of dynamic heterogeneities in the s-SK model explicitly demonstrates that these are not necessarily related to {\it spatial} heterogeneities. For the s-FM it is shown that the nature of the dynamic heterogeneities changes as a function of dimensionality. With incresing dimension the frequency selectivity of the NHB diminishes and the dynamics in the mean-field limit of the s-FM model becomes homogeneous.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figure

    Local influence of boundary conditions on a confined supercooled colloidal liquid

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    We study confined colloidal suspensions as a model system which approximates the behavior of confined small molecule glass-formers. Dense colloidal suspensions become glassier when confined between parallel glass plates. We use confocal microscopy to study the motion of confined colloidal particles. In particular, we examine the influence particles stuck to the glass plates have on nearby free particles. Confinement appears to be the primary influence slowing free particle motion, and proximity to stuck particles causes a secondary reduction in the mobility of free particles. Overall, particle mobility is fairly constant across the width of the sample chamber, but a strong asymmetry in boundary conditions results in a slight gradient of particle mobility.Comment: For conference proceedings, "Dynamics in Confinement", Grenoble, March 201

    Anomalous self-diffusion in the ferromagnetic Ising chain with Kawasaki dynamics

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    We investigate the motion of a tagged spin in a ferromagnetic Ising chain evolving under Kawasaki dynamics. At equilibrium, the displacement is Gaussian, with a variance growing as At1/2A t^{1/2}. The temperature dependence of the prefactor AA is derived exactly. At low temperature, where the static correlation length ξ\xi is large, the mean square displacement grows as (t/ξ2)2/3(t/\xi^2)^{2/3} in the coarsening regime, i.e., as a finite fraction of the mean square domain length. The case of totally asymmetric dynamics, where (+)(+) (resp. ()(-)) spins move only to the right (resp. to the left), is also considered. In the steady state, the displacement variance grows as Bt2/3B t^{2/3}. The temperature dependence of the prefactor BB is derived exactly, using the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang theory. At low temperature, the displacement variance grows as t/ξ2t/\xi^2 in the coarsening regime, again proportionally to the mean square domain length.Comment: 22 pages, 8 figures. A few minor changes and update

    Relationship between dynamical heterogeneities and stretched exponential relaxation

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    We identify the dynamical heterogeneities as an essential prerequisite for stretched exponential relaxation in dynamically frustrated systems. This heterogeneity takes the form of ordered domains of finite but diverging lifetime for particles in atomic or molecular systems, or spin states in magnetic materials. At the onset of the dynamical heterogeneity, the distribution of time intervals spent in such domains or traps becomes stretched exponential at long time. We rigorously show that once this is the case, the autocorrelation function of the renewal process formed by these time intervals is also stretched exponential at long time.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, submitted to PR
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