Jump-Precursor State and a Lengthening Rate-Exchange Time in the Crossover Region of Supercooled <i>o</i>-Terphenyl
ORAL
Abstract
There is a “crossover” in the nature of relaxation in the middle of the supercooled liquid range. We have re-analyzed millisecond-long simulations of o-terphenyl [J. Phys. Chem. B 117, 12898 (2013)] with new statistical methods that provide more molecular detail about this crossover. These simulations reach α-relaxation times τα that are two orders-of-magnitude slower than at the mode-coupling temperature TMCT. The rotational Green’s function shows that as the temperature drops below TMCT, the rotational-jump size lengthen, and an unexpected jump-precursor state emerges. The rate-exchange time τex is measured using multidimensional correlation functions. It is below the α-relaxation time, τex < τα , at TMCT, but slows to τex = τα at the lowest temperature simulated. The same methods applied to single-molecule data [Phys. Rev. E 98, 040603(R) (2018)] show that the slowing continues to τex = 22 τα close to the glass transition. Overall, a broad crossover is seen, which involves multiple phenomena, including ones unique to the crossover region.
*Based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation – Chemical Measurement and Imaging program under Grant Nos. CHE-1707813 and CHE-2003619 (with co-funding from the Chemical Structures, Dynamics, and Mechanisms - A program)
–
Presenters
-
Mark Berg
- Univ of South Carolina