An energy-landscape-based crossover temperature in glass-forming liquids.

J Chem Phys

Institute for Theoretical Physics, University of Amsterdam, Science Park 904, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Published: December 2020

The systematic identification of temperature scales in supercooled liquids that are key to understanding those liquids' underlying glass properties, and their formation-history dependence, is a challenging task. Here, we study the statistics of particles' squared displacements δr between equilibrium liquid configurations at temperature T and their underlying inherent states, using computer simulations of 11 different computer glass formers. We show that the relative fluctuations of δr are nonmonotonic in T, exhibiting a maximum whose location defines the crossover temperature T. Therefore, T marks the point of maximal heterogeneity during the process of tumbling down the energy landscape, starting from an equilibrium liquid state at temperature T down to its underlying inherent state. We extract T for the 11 employed computer glasses, ranging from tetrahedral glasses to packs of soft elastic spheres, and demonstrate its usefulness in putting the elastic properties of different glasses on the same footing. Interestingly, we further show that T marks the crossover between two distinct regimes of the mean ⟨δr⟩: a high temperature regime in which ⟨δr⟩ scales approximately as T and a deeply supercooled regime in which ⟨δr⟩ scales approximately as T. Further research directions are discussed.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0034719DOI Listing

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