Higher Order Structure in the Energy Landscapes of Model Glass Formers
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Authors
Advisors
Date
2018-07-20Awarding Institution
University of Cambridge
Author Affiliation
Chemistry
Qualification
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Language
English
Type
Thesis
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Niblett, S. P. (2018). Higher Order Structure in the Energy Landscapes of Model Glass Formers (Doctoral thesis). https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.24900
Abstract
The study of supercooled liquids and glasses remains one of the most divisive and
divided fields in modern physics. Despite a vast amount of effort and research time
invested in this topic, the answers to many central questions remain disputed and
incomplete. However, the link between the behaviour of supercooled liquids and
their energy landscapes is well established and widely accepted. Understanding this
link would be a key step towards resolving many of the mysteries and controversies
surrounding the glass transition. Therefore the study of glassy energy landscapes is
an important area of research.
In this thesis, I report some of the most detailed computational studies of glassy
potential energy landscapes ever performed. Using geometry optimisation techniques,
I have sampled the local minima and saddle points of the landscapes for
several supercooled liquids to analyse their dynamics and thermodynamics.
Some of my analysis follows previous work on the binary Lennard-Jones fluid
(BLJ), a model atomic liquid. BLJ is a fragile glass former, meaning that its
transport coefficients have super-Arrhenius temperature dependence, rather than
the more usual Arrhenius behaviour exhibited by strong liquids. The difference
in behaviour between these two classes of liquid has previously been attributed to
differing degrees of structure in the relevant energy landscapes.
I have studied models for both fragile and strong glass formers: the molecular
liquid ortho-terphenyl (OTP) and viscous silica (SiO$_{2}$) respectively. My results for
OTP agree closely with trends observed for BLJ, suggesting that the same diffusion
mechanism is applicable to fragile molecular liquids as well as to atomic. However,
the dynamics and energy landscape of OTP are made complicated by the molecular
orientational degrees of freedom, making the analysis more challenging for this
system.
Dynamics of BLJ, OTP and silica are all dominated by cage-breaking events:
structural rearrangements in which atoms change their nearest neighbours. I propose
a robust and general method to identify cage breaks for small rigid molecules, and
compare some properties of cage breaks between strong and fragile systems.
The energy landscapes of BLJ and OTP both display hierarchical ordering of potential energy minima into metabasins. These metabasins can be detected by
the cage-breaking method. It has previously been suggested that metabasins are
responsible for super-Arrhenius behaviour, and are absent from the landscapes of
strong liquids such as SiO2. My results indicate that metabasins are present on the
silica landscape, but that they each contain fewer minima than metabasins in BLJ
or OTP.
Metabasins are associated with anticorrelated particle motion, mediated by reversed
transitions between minima of the potential energy landscape. I show that
accounting for time-correlation of particle displacement vectors is essential to describe
super-Arrhenius behaviour in BLJ and OTP, but also required to reproduce
strong behaviour in silica. I hypothesise that the difference between strong and fragile
liquids arises from a longer correlation timescale in the latter case, and I suggest
a number of ways in which this proposition could be tested.
I have investigated the effect on the landscape of freezing the positions of some
particles in a BLJ fluid. This “pinning” procedure induces a dynamical crossover
that has been described as an equilibrium “pinning transition”, related to the hypothetical
ideal glass transition. I show that the pinning transition is related to (and
probably caused by) a dramatic change in the potential energy landscape.
Pinning a large fraction of the particles in a supercooled liquid causes its energy
landscape to acquire global structure and hence structure-seeking behaviour, very
different from the landscape of a typical supercooled liquid. I provide a detailed
description of this change in structure, and investigate the mechanism underlying
it.
I introduce a new algorithm for identifying hierarchical organisation of a landsape,
which uses concepts related to the pinning transition but is applicable to
unpinned liquids as well. This definition is complementary to metabasins, but the
two methods often identify the same higher-order structures. The new “packings”
algorithm offers a route to test thermodynamic theories of the glass transition in
the context of the potential energy landscape.
Over the course of this thesis, I discuss several different terms and methods to
identify higher-order structures in the landscapes of model glass formers, and investigate
how this organisation varies between different systems. Although little
variation is immediately apparent between most glassy landscapes, deeper analysis
reveals a surprising diversity, which has important implications for dynamical
behaviour in the vicinity of the glass transition.
Keywords
Potential Energy Landscape, Glass Transition, Supercooled Liquid, Theoretical Chemistry, Statistical Physics, Fragility, Random Pinning
Sponsorship
PhD studentship funded by the Cambridge Home Student Scholarship scheme and the Department of Chemistry
Identifiers
This record's DOI: https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.24900
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)
Licence URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
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