Unexpected drop of dynamical heterogeneities in colloidal suspensions approaching the jamming transition
Pierre Ballesta (LCVN), Agnes Duri (LCVN), Luca Cipelletti (LCVN)

TL;DR
This study reveals that dynamical heterogeneities in colloidal suspensions unexpectedly decrease near the jamming transition, challenging previous assumptions about their continuous growth as systems approach dynamical arrest.
Contribution
It demonstrates a surprising drop in dynamical heterogeneity measures near jamming, highlighting a complex interplay between correlation length and particle displacements.
Findings
Dynamical susceptibility peaks then drop near jamming
Growth of correlation length competes with reduced particle displacements
Reveals a richer scenario of dynamical behavior close to arrest
Abstract
As the glass (in molecular fluids\cite{Donth}) or the jamming (in colloids and grains\cite{LiuNature1998}) transitions are approached, the dynamics slow down dramatically with no marked structural changes. Dynamical heterogeneity (DH) plays a crucial role: structural relaxation occurs through correlated rearrangements of particle ``blobs'' of size \cite{WeeksScience2000,DauchotPRL2005,Glotzer,Ediger}. On approaching these transitions, grows in glass-formers\cite{Glotzer,Ediger}, colloids\cite{WeeksScience2000,BerthierScience2005}, and driven granular materials\cite{KeysNaturePhys2007} alike, strengthening the analogies between the glass and the jamming transitions. However, little is known yet on the behavior of DH very close to dynamical arrest. Here, we measure in colloids the maximum of a ``dynamical susceptibility'', , whose growth is usually associated to that of…
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