The role of local structure in dynamical arrest
C. Patrick Royall, Stephen R. Williams

TL;DR
This paper critically reviews the role of local structure in the phenomenon of dynamical arrest in glasses, examining experimental, simulation, and theoretical perspectives, and discusses implications for material design and unresolved phenomenology.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive survey of recent structural measures related to dynamical arrest and explores their potential to establish a causal link between structure and glass formation.
Findings
Emergence of structure correlates with dynamical arrest in various glass formers
Higher-order structural measures offer insights into the glass transition
Understanding structure can inform design of glass-forming materials
Abstract
Amorphous solids, or glasses, are distinguished from crystalline solids by their lack of long-range structural order. At the level of two-body structural correlations, glassformers show no qualitative change upon vitrifying from a supercooled liquid. Nonetheless the dynamical properties of a glass are so much slower that it appears to take on the properties of a solid. While many theories of the glass transition focus on dynamical quantities, a solid's resistance to flow is often viewed as a consequence of its structure. Here we address the viewpoint that this remains the case for a glass. Recent developments using higher-order measures show a clear emergence of structure upon dynamical arrest in a variety of glass formers and offer the tantalising hope of a structural mechanism for arrest. However a rigorous fundamental identification of such a causal link between structure and arrest…
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