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Unified Theory of Activated Relaxation in Liquids over 14 Decades in Time
We
formulate a predictive theory at the level of forces of activated
relaxation in hard-sphere fluids and thermal liquids that covers in
a unified manner the apparent Arrhenius, crossover, and deeply supercooled
regimes. The alpha relaxation event involves coupled cage-scale hopping
and a long-range collective elastic distortion of the surrounding
liquid, which results in two inter-related, but distinct, barriers.
The strongly temperature and density dependent collective barrier
is associated with a growing length scale, the shear modulus, and
density fluctuations. Thermal liquids are mapped to an effective hard-sphere
fluid based on matching long wavelength density fluctuation amplitudes,
resulting in a zeroth-order quasi-universal description. The theory
is devoid of fit parameters, has no divergences at finite temperature
nor below jamming, and captures the key features of the alpha time
of molecular liquids from picoseconds to hundreds of seconds