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(327) Production(s) de BERTHIER L.
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Predicting Dynamic Heterogeneity in Glass-Forming Liquids by Physics-informed Machine Learning
Auteur(s): Jung G., Biroli Giulio, Berthier L.
(Article) Publié:
Physical Review Letters, vol. 130 p.238202 (2023)
Texte intégral en Openaccess :
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Dynamic Gardner cross-over in a simple glass
Auteur(s): Liao Qinyi, Berthier L., Zhou Hai-Jun, Xu Ning
(Article) Publié:
Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America, vol. 120 p.e2218218120 (2023)
Texte intégral en Openaccess :
Ref HAL: hal-04140969_v1
Ref Arxiv: 2209.10917
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2218218120
Ref. & Cit.: NASA ADS
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
Résumé: The criticality of the jamming transition responsible for amorphous solidification has been theoretically linked to the marginal stability of a thermodynamic Gardner phase. While the critical exponents of jamming appear independent of the preparation history, the pertinence of Gardner physics far from equilibrium is an open question. To fill this gap, we numerically study the nonequilibrium dynamics of hard disks compressed toward the jamming transition using a broad variety of protocols. We show that dynamic signatures of Gardner physics can be disentangled from the aging relaxation dynamics. We thus define a generic dynamic Gardner cross-over regardless of the history. Our results show that the jamming transition is always accessed by exploring increasingly complex landscape, resulting in anomalous microscopic relaxation dynamics that remains to be understood theoretically.
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Two-step devitrification of ultrastable glasses
Auteur(s): Herrero C., Scalliet C., Ediger M., Berthier L.
(Article) Publié:
Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America, vol. 120 p. (2023)
Texte intégral en Openaccess :
Ref HAL: hal-04117704_v1
Ref Arxiv: 2210.04775
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2220824120
Ref. & Cit.: NASA ADS
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
Résumé: The discovery of ultrastable glasses raises novel challenges about glassy systems. Recent experiments studied the macroscopic devitrification of ultrastable glasses into liquids upon heating but lacked microscopic resolution. We use molecular dynamics simulations to analyze the kinetics of this transformation. In the most stable systems, devitrification occurs after a very large time, but the liquid emerges in two steps. At short times, we observe the rare nucleation and slow growth of isolated droplets containing a liquid maintained under pressure by the rigidity of the surrounding glass. At large times, pressure is released after the droplets coalesce into large domains, which accelerates devitrification. This two-step process produces pronounced deviations from the classical Avrami kinetics and explains the emergence of a giant lengthscale characterizing the devitrification of bulk ultrastable glasses. Our study elucidates the nonequilibrium kinetics of glasses following a large temperature jump, which differs from both equilibrium relaxation and aging dynamics, and will guide future experimental studies.
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Modern computational studies of the glass transition
Auteur(s): Berthier L., Reichman David
(Article) Publié:
-Nature Reviews Physics, vol. 5 p.102-116 (2023)
Texte intégral en Openaccess :
Ref HAL: hal-04117501_v1
Ref Arxiv: 2208.02206
DOI: 10.1038/s42254-022-00548-x
Ref. & Cit.: NASA ADS
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
Résumé: The physics of the glass transition and amorphous materials continues to attract the attention of a wide research community after decades of effort. Supercooled liquids and glasses have been studied numerically since the advent of molecular dynamics and Monte Carlo simulations in the last century. Computer studies have greatly enhanced both experimental discoveries and theoretical developments and constitute an active and continually expanding research field. Our goal in this review is to provide a modern perspective on this area. We describe the need to go beyond canonical methods to attack a problem that is notoriously difficult in terms of time scales, length scales, and physical observables. We first summarise recent algorithmic developments to achieve enhanced sampling and faster equilibration using replica exchange methods, cluster and swap Monte Carlo algorithms, and other techniques. We then review some major recent advances afforded by these novel tools regarding the statistical mechanical description of the liquid-to-glass transition as well as the mechanical, vibrational and thermal properties of the glassy solid. We finally describe some important challenges for future research.
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Computer simulations of the glass transition and glassy materials
Auteur(s): Barrat Jean-Louis, Berthier L.
(Article) Publié:
Comptes Rendus Physique, vol. 24 p.1-16 (2023)
Texte intégral en Openaccess :
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Thirty milliseconds in the life of a supercooled liquid
Auteur(s): Scalliet C., Guiselin B., Berthier L.
(Article) Publié:
Physical Review X, vol. p.041028 (2022)
Texte intégral en Openaccess :
Ref HAL: hal-03915196_v1
Ref Arxiv: 2207.00491
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevX.12.041028
Ref. & Cit.: NASA ADS
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
Résumé: We combine the swap Monte Carlo algorithm to long multi-CPU molecular dynamics simulations to analyse the equilibrium relaxation dynamics of model supercooled liquids over a time window covering ten orders of magnitude for temperatures down to the experimental glass transition temperature $T_g$. The analysis of \rev{several} time correlation functions coupled to spatio-temporal resolution of particle motion allow us to elucidate the nature of the equilibrium dynamics in deeply supercooled liquids. We find that structural relaxation starts at early times in rare localised regions characterised by a waiting time distribution that develops a power law near $T_g$. At longer times, relaxation events accumulate with increasing probability in these regions as $T_g$ is approached. This accumulation leads to a power-law growth of the linear extension of relaxed domains with time with a large, temperature-dependent dynamic exponent. Past the average relaxation time, unrelaxed domains slowly shrink with time due to relaxation events happening at their boundaries. Our results provide a complete microscopic description of the particle motion responsible for key experimental signatures of glassy dynamics, from the shape and temperature evolution of relaxation spectra to the core features of dynamic heterogeneity. They also provide a microscopic basis to understand the emergence of dynamic facilitation in deeply supercooled liquids and allow us to critically reassess theoretical descriptions of the glass transition.
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Is glass a state of matter?
Auteur(s): Guiselin B., Tarjus Gilles, Berthier L.
(Article) Publié:
Physics And Chemistry Of Glasses: European Journal Of Glass Science And Technology Part B, vol. p.136 (2022)
Texte intégral en Openaccess :
Ref HAL: hal-03915194_v1
Ref Arxiv: 2207.14204
DOI: 10.13036/17533562.63.5.15
Ref. & Cit.: NASA ADS
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
Résumé: Glass is everywhere. We use and are surrounded by glass objects which make tangible the reality of glass as a distinct state of matter. Yet, glass as we know it is usually obtained by cooling a liquid sufficiently rapidly below its melting point to avoid crystallisation. The viscosity of this supercooled liquid increases by many orders of magnitude upon cooling, until the liquid becomes essentially arrested on experimental timescales below the ``glass transition'' temperature. From a structural viewpoint, the obtained glass still very much resembles the disordered liquid, but from a mechanical viewpoint, it is as rigid as an ordered crystal. Does glass qualify as a separate state of matter? We provide a pedagogical perspective on this question using basic statistical mechanical concepts. We recall the definitions of states of matter and of phase transitions between them. We review recent theoretical results suggesting why and how an ``ideal glass'' can indeed be defined as a separate equilibrium state of matter. We discuss recent success of computer simulations trying to analyse this glass state. We close with some experimental perspectives.
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