Molecular dynamics study of the stability of the hard sphere glass

被引:83
|
作者
Williams, SR [1 ]
Snook, IK [1 ]
van Megen, W [1 ]
机构
[1] RMIT Univ, Dept Appl Phys, Melbourne, Vic 3001, Australia
关键词
D O I
10.1103/PhysRevE.64.021506
中图分类号
O35 [流体力学]; O53 [等离子体物理学];
学科分类号
070204 ; 080103 ; 080704 ;
摘要
Glassy states have been observed in hard-spherelike colloidal suspensions however, some recent work suggests that a stable, one-component hard-sphere glass doesn't exist. A possible resolution of this dilemma is that colloidal glass formation results from a small degree of particle polydispersity. In order to investigate this further, we used the molecular-dynamics method to explore the phase behavior of both one- and two-component hard-sphere systems. It was found that the metastable fluid branch of the one-component system ceased to exist at a volume fraction marginally above melting, instead this system always crystallized within a relatively short period of time. Binary systems with a size ratio gamma =0.9 were then used as the simplest approximation to model a polydisperse hard-sphere colloidal system. Here the crystallization process was slowed down dramatically for all volume fractions and the fluid state was maintained for many relaxation times. Indeed, at the lowest volume fraction phi = 0.55 no sign of crystallization was seen on the simulation time scale. The systems at intermediate volume fractions did eventually crystallize but at the highest volume fraction of phi = 0.58, a dramatic slowing down in the crystallization process was observed. This is qualitatively in agreement with the experimental results on colloidal suspensions. Using the insight gained from this paper, the reasons behind a polydisperse system forming a stable glass, in contrast to the one-component system, are elucidated.
引用
收藏
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Molecular dynamics simulation of binary hard sphere colloids near the glass transition
    van Swol, Frank
    Petsev, Dimiter N.
    [J]. RSC ADVANCES, 2014, 4 (41): : 21631 - 21637
  • [2] Glass transition of hard sphere systems - Molecular dynamics and density functional approaches
    Kim, K
    Munakata, T
    [J]. SLOW DYNAMICS IN COMPLEX SYSTEMS, 2004, 708 : 707 - 708
  • [3] Glass transition of hard sphere systems: Molecular dynamics and density functional theory
    Kim, K
    Munakata, T
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW E, 2003, 68 (02):
  • [4] LINEAR EXCITATIONS AND THE STABILITY OF THE HARD-SPHERE GLASS
    STOESSEL, JP
    WOLYNES, PG
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 1984, 80 (09): : 4502 - 4512
  • [5] Anomalous dynamics at the hard-sphere glass transition
    Kwasniewski, Pawel
    Fluerasu, Andrei
    Madsen, Anders
    [J]. SOFT MATTER, 2014, 10 (43) : 8698 - 8704
  • [6] Slow dynamics and aging of a colloidal hard sphere glass
    Martinez, V. A.
    Bryant, G.
    van Megen, W.
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 2008, 101 (13)
  • [7] Aging of a hard-sphere glass: effect of the microscopic dynamics
    Puertas, Antonio M.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PHYSICS-CONDENSED MATTER, 2010, 22 (10)
  • [8] Diffusion of hard sphere fluids in disordered media: A molecular dynamics simulation study
    Chang, RW
    Jagannathan, K
    Yethiraj, A
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW E, 2004, 69 (05): : 9
  • [9] Isobaric molecular dynamics simulations of hard sphere systems
    Gruhn, T
    Monson, PA
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW E, 2001, 63 (06):
  • [10] Isobaric molecular dynamics simulations of hard sphere systems
    Gruhn, T.
    Monson, P.A.
    [J]. Physical Review E - Statistical, Nonlinear, and Soft Matter Physics, 2001, 63 (6 I): : 1 - 061106