Pressure-energy correlations in liquids. II. Analysis and consequences
Nicholas P. Bailey, Ulf R. Pedersen, Nicoletta Gnan, Thomas B., Schr{\o}der, Jeppe C. Dyre

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the strong pressure-energy correlations in liquids, especially Lennard-Jones systems, revealing their origins, implications for supercritical fluids, glass transition, aging, and biomembranes, and proposing an effective power-law approximation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that pressure-energy correlations arise from the entire first peak of the RDF and introduces an improved potential approximation including a linear term.
Findings
96% correlation in supercritical Argon
Strong correlations imply unified response functions in viscous liquids
Aging behavior in ortho-terphenyl can be explained by pressure-energy correlations
Abstract
We present an analysis and discuss consequences of the strong correlations of the configurational parts of pressure and energy in their equilibrium fluctuations at fixed volume reported for simulations of several liquids in the companion paper [arXiv:0807.0550]. The analysis concentrates specifically on the single-component Lennard-Jones system. We demonstrate that the potential may be replaced, at fixed volume, by an effective power-law, but not because only short distance encounters dominate the fluctuations. Indeed, contributions to the fluctuations are associated with the whole first peak of the RDF, as we demonstrate by an analysis of the spatially resolved covariance matrix. The reason the effective power-law works so well depends on going beyond single-pair effects and on the constraint of fixed volume. In particular, a better approximation to the potential includes a linear…
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