Finite size effects in the dynamics of glass-forming liquids
Ludovic Berthier, Giulio Biroli, Daniele Coslovich, Walter Kob,, Cristina Toninelli

TL;DR
This paper provides a comprehensive theoretical analysis of finite size effects in glass-forming liquids, combining various models and simulations to reveal non-monotonic behaviors near the mode-coupling transition.
Contribution
It introduces a unified theoretical framework predicting non-monotonic finite size effects across the mode-coupling crossover, supported by molecular dynamics simulations of different model liquids.
Findings
Less fragile models show modest size effects
More fragile models exhibit significant size dependence with temperature
Binary mixture of harmonic spheres shows non-monotonic temperature evolution
Abstract
We present a comprehensive theoretical study of finite size effects in the relaxation dynamics of glass-forming liquids. Our analysis is motivated by recent theoretical progress regarding the understanding of relevant correlation length scales in liquids approaching the glass transition. We obtain predictions both from general theoretical arguments and from a variety of specific perspectives: mode-coupling theory, kinetically constrained and defect models, and random first order transition theory. In the latter approach, we predict in particular a non-monotonic evolution of finite size effects across the mode-coupling crossover due to the competition between mode-coupling and activated relaxation. We study the role of competing relaxation mechanisms in giving rise to non-monotonic finite size effects by devising a kinetically constrained model where the proximity to the mode-coupling…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMaterial Dynamics and Properties · Material Science and Thermodynamics
