Structural signatures of dynamic heterogeneities in monolayers of colloidal ellipsoids

ORAL

Abstract

When a liquid is supercooled towards the glass transition, its dynamics drastically slows down, whereas its static structure remains relatively unchanged. Finding a structural signature of the dynamic slowing-down is a major challenge, yet it is often too subtle to be uncovered. Here we discover the structural signatures for both translational and rotational dynamics in monolayers of colloidal ellipsoids by video-microscopy experiments and computer simulations. The correlation lengths of the dynamic slowest-moving clusters, the static glassy clusters, the static local structural entropy and the dynamic heterogeneity follow the same power-law divergence, suggesting that the kinetic slowing down is caused by a decrease in the structural entropy and an increase in the size of the glassy cluster. Ellipsoids with different aspect ratios exhibit single- or double-step glass transitions with distinct dynamic heterogeneities. These findings demonstrate that the particle shape anisotropy has important effects on the structure and dynamics of the glass. The power-law divergence of the static correlation length with exponent -1 suggests that the glass transition is likely a two-dimensional Ising-type critical phenomenon.

*This work was supported by grants GRF601613, PRC11SC04 and NSFC1137424, 11104286, 11372314, 51071166.

Authors

  • Zhongyu Zheng

    • Institute of Mechanics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • Yuren Wang

    • Institute of Mechanics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • Yilong Han

    • Hong Kong Univ of Sci \& Tech
    • Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
    • The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology