459 research outputs found
Numerical Investigation of Glassy Dynamics in Low Density Systems
Vitrification in colloidal systems typically occurs at high densities driven
by sharply varying, short-ranged interactions. The possibility of glassy
behavior arising from smoothly varying, long-ranged particle interactions has
received relatively little attention. Here we investigate the behavior of
screened charged particles, and explicitly demonstrate that these systems
exhibit glassy properties in the regime of low temperature and low density.
Properties close to this low density (Wigner) glass transition share many
features with their hard-sphere counterparts, but differ in quantitative
aspects that may be accounted for via microscopic theoretical considerations.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, revised versio
Numerical study of the glass-glass transition in short-ranged attractive colloids
We report extensive numerical simulations in the {\it glass} region for a
simple model of short-ranged attractive colloids, the square well model. We
investigate the behavior of the density autocorrelation function and of the
static structure factor in the region of temperatures and packing fractions
where a glass-glass transition is expected according to theoretical
predictions. We strengthen our observations by studying both waiting time and
history dependence of the numerical results. We provide evidence supporting the
possibility that activated bond-breaking processes destabilize the attractive
glass, preventing the full observation of a sharp glass-glass kinetic
transition.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures; Proceedings of "Structural Arrest Transitions in
Colloidal Systems with Short-Range Attractions", Messina, Italy, December
2003 (submitted to J. Phys.: Condens. Matt.
Equilibrium cluster phases and low-density arrested disordered states: The role of short-range attraction and long-range repulsion
We study a model in which particles interact with short-ranged attractive and
long-ranged repulsive interactions, in an attempt to model the equilibrium
cluster phase recently discovered in sterically stabilized colloidal systems in
the presence of depletion interactions. At low packing fraction particles form
stable equilibrium clusters which act as building blocks of a cluster fluid. We
study the possibility that cluster fluids generate a low-density disordered
arrested phase, a gel, via a glass transition driven by the repulsive
interaction. In this model the gel formation is formally described with the
same physics of the glass formation.Comment: RevTeX4, 4 pages, 4 eps figure
Competing interactions in arrested states of colloidal clays
Using experiments, theory and simulations, we show that the arrested state
observed in a colloidal clay at intermediate concentrations is stabilized by
the screened Coulomb repulsion (Wigner glass). Dilution experiments allow us to
distinguish this high-concentration disconnected state, which melts upon
addition of water, from a low-concentration gel state, which does not melt.
Theoretical modelling and simulations reproduce the measured Small Angle X-Ray
Scattering static structure factors and confirm the long-range electrostatic
nature of the arrested structure. These findings are attributed to the
different timescales controlling the competing attractive and repulsive
interactions.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review Letter
Theoretical and numerical study of the phase diagram of patchy colloids: ordered and disordered patch arrangements
We report theoretical and numerical evaluations of the phase diagram for a
model of patchy particles. Specifically we study hard-spheres whose surface is
decorated by a small number f of identical sites ("sticky spots'') interacting
via a short-range square-well attraction. We theoretically evaluate, solving
the Wertheim theory, the location of the critical point and the gas-liquid
coexistence line for several values of f and compare them to results of Gibbs
and Grand Canonical Monte Carlo simulations. We study both ordered and
disordered arrangements of the sites on the hard-sphere surface and confirm
that patchiness has a strong effect on the phase diagram: the gas-liquid
coexistence region in the temperature-density plane is significantly reduced as
f decreases. We also theoretically evaluate the locus of specific heat maxima
and the percolation line.Comment: preprint, 32 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables, J. Chem. Phys. in pres
Harmonic damped oscillators with feedback. A Langevin study
We consider a system in direct contact with a thermal reservoir and which, if
left unperturbed, is well described by a memory-less equilibrium Langevin
equation of the second order in the time coordinate. In such conditions, the
strength of the noise fluctuations is set by the damping factor, in accordance
with the Fluctuation and Dissipation theorem. We study the system when it is
subject to a feedback mechanism, by modifying the Langevin equation
accordingly. Memory terms now arise in the time evolution, which we study in a
non-equilibrium steady state. Two types of feedback schemes are considered, one
focusing on time shifts and one on phase shifts, and for both cases we evaluate
the power spectrum of the system's fluctuations. Our analysis finds application
in feedback cooled oscillators, such as the Gravitational Wave detector AURIGA.Comment: 17 page
Star-Like Micelles with Star-Like Interactions: A quantitative Evaluation of Structure Factor and Phase Diagram
PEP-PEO block copolymer micelles offer the possibility to investigate phase
behaviour and interactions of star polymers (ultra-soft colloids). A star-like
architecture is achieved by an extremely asymmetric block ratio (1:20).
Micellar functionality f can be smoothly varied by changing solvent composition
(interfacial tension). Structure factors obtained by SANS can be quantitatively
described in terms of an effective potential developed for star polymers. The
experimental phase diagram reproduces to a high level of accuracy the predicted
liquid/solid transition. Whereas for intermediate f a bcc phase is observed,
for high f the formation of a fcc phase is preempted by glass formation.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, PRL in pres
Dynamics of supercooled liquids: density fluctuations and Mode Coupling Theory
We write equations of motion for density variables that are equivalent to
Newtons equations. We then propose a set of trial equations parameterised by
two unknown functions to describe the exact equations. These are chosen to best
fit the exact Newtonian equations. Following established ideas, we choose to
separate these trial functions into a set representing integrable motions of
density waves, and a set containing all effects of non-integrability. It
transpires that the static structure factor is fixed by this minimum condition
to be the solution of the Yvon-Born-Green (YBG) equation. The residual
interactions between density waves are explicitly isolated in their Newtonian
representation and expanded by choosing the dominant objects in the phase space
of the system, that can be represented by a dissipative term with memory and a
random noise. This provides a mapping between deterministic and stochastic
dynamics. Imposing the Fluctuation-Dissipation Theorem (FDT) allows us to
calculate the memory kernel. We write exactly the expression for it, following
two different routes, i.e. using explicitly Newtons equations, or instead,
their implicit form, that must be projected onto density pairs, as in the
development of the well-established Mode Coupling Theory (MCT). We compare
these two ways of proceeding, showing the necessity to enforce a new equation
of constraint for the two schemes to be consistent. Thus, while in the first
`Newtonian' representation a simple gaussian approximation for the random
process leads easily to the Mean Spherical Approximation (MSA) for the statics
and to MCT for the dynamics of the system, in the second case higher levels of
approximation are required to have a fully consistent theory
Gaussian density fluctuations and Mode Coupling Theory for supercooled liquids
The equations of motion for the density modes of a fluid, derived from
Newton's equations, are written as a linear generalized Langevin equation. The
constraint imposed by the fluctuation-dissipation theorem is used to derive an
exact form for the memory function. The resulting equations, solved under the
assumption that the noise, and consequently density fluctuations, of the liquid
are gaussian distributed, are equivalent to the random-phase-approximation for
the static structure factor and to the well known ideal mode coupling theory
(MCT) equations for the dynamics. This finding suggests that MCT is the
canonical mean-field theory of the fluid dynamics.Comment: 4 pages, REVTE
Multiple glass transitions in star polymer mixtures: Insights from theory and simulations
The glass transition in binary mixtures of star polymers is studied by mode
coupling theory and extensive molecular dynamics computer simulations. In
particular, we have explored vitrification in the parameter space of size
asymmetry and concentration of the small star polymers at
fixed concentration of the large ones. Depending on the choice of parameters,
three different glassy states are identified: a single glass of big polymers at
low and low , a double glass at high and low
, and a novel double glass at high and high which is
characterized by a strong localization of the small particles. At low
and high there is a competition between vitrification and phase
separation. Centered in the -plane, a liquid lake shows up
revealing reentrant glass formation. We compare the behavior of the dynamical
density correlators with the predictions of the theory and find remarkable
agreement between the two.Comment: 15 figures, to be published in Macromolecule
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