Nonequilibrium static growing length scales in supercooled liquids on approaching the glass transition
\'Etienne Marcotte, Frank H. Stillinger, Salvatore Torquato

TL;DR
This study reveals that supercooled liquids exhibit growing static length scales associated with the glass transition, detectable through correlation functions, and these scales are intrinsically nonequilibrium phenomena correlated with relaxation times.
Contribution
It extends previous work by demonstrating the presence of growing static length scales in atomic models approaching the glass transition, using generalized correlation functions and nonequilibrium indices.
Findings
Growing length scales are evident before the glass transition.
Long-range direct correlation functions signal the transition.
Nonequilibrium index correlates with relaxation time.
Abstract
The small wavenumber behavior of the structure factor of overcompressed amorphous hard-sphere configurations was previously studied for a wide range of densities up to the maximally random jammed state, which can be viewed as a prototypical glassy state [A. Hopkins, F. H. Stillinger and S. Torquato, Phys. Rev. E, 86, 021505 (2012)]. It was found that a precursor to the glassy jammed state was evident long before the jamming density was reached as measured by a growing nonequilibrium length scale extracted from the volume integral of the direct correlation function , which becomes long-ranged as the critical jammed state is reached. The present study extends that work by investigating via computer simulations two different atomic models: the single-component Z2 Dzugutov potential in three dimensions and the binary-mixture Kob-Andersen potential in two dimensions.…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
