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- Configurational entropy measurements in extremely supercooled liquids that break the glass ceiling doi link

Auteur(s): Berthier L., Charbonneau Patrick, Coslovich D., Ninarello A. S., Ozawa M., Yaida Sho

(Article) Publié: Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America, vol. 114 p.11356 (2017)
Texte intégral en Openaccess : arxiv


Ref HAL: hal-01630755_v1
Ref Arxiv: 1704.08257
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1706860114
WoS: 000413520700049
Ref. & Cit.: NASA ADS
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47 Citations
Résumé:

Liquids relax extremely slowly upon approaching the glass state. One explanation is that an entropy crisis, due to the rarefaction of available states, makes it increasingly arduous to reach equilibrium in that regime. Validating this scenario is challenging, because experiments offer limited resolution, while numerical studies lag more than eight orders of magnitude behind experimentally-relevant timescales. In this work we not only close the colossal gap between experiments and simulations but manage to create in-silico configurations that have no experimental analog yet. Deploying a range of computational tools, we obtain four estimates of their configurational entropy. These measurements consistently confirm that the steep entropy decrease observed in experiments is also found in simulations, even beyond the experimental glass transition. Our numerical results thus extend the new observational window into the physics of glasses and reinforce the relevance of an entropy crisis for understanding their formation.



Commentaires: 4+23 pages, 3+12 figures; v2: final version, with various changes made. Data relevant to this work can be accessed at http://dx.doi.org/10.7924/G8ZG6Q9T. Réf Journal: PNAS 114, 11356-11361 (2017)