Inherent-State Melting and the Onset of Glassy Dynamics in Two-Dimensional Supercooled Liquids
ORAL
Abstract
Below the onset temperature To, most glass formers are characterized by the super-Arrhenius temperature dependence of their equilibrium relaxation time. In this supercooled regime, the relaxation dynamics also proceeds through localized elastic excitations [1] corresponding to hopping events between inherent states. Despite its importance in distinguishing the supercooled regime from the high-temperature regime, the microscopic origin of To is not yet known. Here, we construct a theory for the onset temperature in two dimensions [2] and find that a binding-unbinding transition of dipolar elastic excitations, analogous to the Kosterlitz-Thouless-Halperin-Nelson-Young (KTHNY) theory, describes the transition from the supercooled regime to the high-temperature one. The predicted transition temperature agrees with the onset temperature found in various two-dimensional (2D) atomistic models of glass formers and an experimental binary colloidal system confined to a water-air interface [3]. We further find the predictions for the renormalized elastic moduli to agree with the experimentally observed values below To for the latter 2D colloidal system.
[1] Hasyim, Mandadapu, J. Chem. Phys. 155 (4), 44504, (2021)
[2] Fraggedakis, Hasyim, Mandadapu, arXiv:2204.07528, (2022)
[3] Klix, Maret, Keim, Physical Review X 5.4 (2015)
[1] Hasyim, Mandadapu, J. Chem. Phys. 155 (4), 44504, (2021)
[2] Fraggedakis, Hasyim, Mandadapu, arXiv:2204.07528, (2022)
[3] Klix, Maret, Keim, Physical Review X 5.4 (2015)
*D.F. (dfrag) acknowledges support from the Miller Institute for Basic Research in Science at University of California, Berkeley. M.R.H. and K.K.M. were entirely supported by the Director, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DEAC02-05CH1123.
–
Publication: https://arxiv.org/abs/2204.07528
Presenters
-
Dimitrios Fraggedakis
- University of California, Berkeley