Microscopic theory of glassy dynamics and glass transition for molecular crystals
Michael Ricker, Rolf Schilling

TL;DR
This paper develops a microscopic mode coupling theory for the glass transition in molecular crystals, revealing how orientational correlations and lattice effects influence glass formation and transition characteristics.
Contribution
It introduces a novel mode coupling framework incorporating Umklapp processes and static orientational densities for molecular crystals, extending liquid theory to crystalline systems.
Findings
Identifies four key differences from liquid mode coupling theory.
Predicts an ideal glass transition driven by orientational order precursors.
Shows glass formation is enhanced in oblate ellipsoids compared to prolate ones.
Abstract
We derive a microscopic equation of motion for the dynamical orientational correlators of molecular crystals. Our approach is based upon mode coupling theory. Compared to liquids we find four main differences: (i) the memory kernel contains Umklapp processes, (ii) besides the static two-molecule orientational correlators one also needs the static one-molecule orientational density as an input, where the latter is nontrivial, (iii) the static orientational current density correlator does contribute an anisotropic, inertia-independent part to the memory kernel, (iv) if the molecules are assumed to be fixed on a rigid lattice, the tensorial orientational correlators and the memory kernel have vanishing l,l'=0 components. The resulting mode coupling equations are solved for hard ellipsoids of revolution on a rigid sc-lattice. Using the static orientational correlators from Percus-Yevick…
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