Recent works show that glass-forming liquids display Fickian non-Gaussian Diffusion, with non-Gaussian displacement distributions persisting even at very long times, when linearity in the mean square displacement (Fickianity) has already been attained. Such non-Gaussian deviations temporarily exhibit distinctive exponential tails, with a decay length (Formula presented.) growing in time as a power-law. We herein carefully examine data from four different glass-forming systems with isotropic interactions, both in two and three dimensions, namely, three numerical models of molecular liquids and one experimentally investigated colloidal suspension. Drawing on the identification of a proper time range for reliable exponential fits, we find that a scaling law (Formula presented.), with (Formula presented.), holds for all considered systems, independently from dimensionality. We further show that, for each system, data at different temperatures/concentration can be collapsed onto a master-curve, identifying a characteristic time for the disappearance of exponential tails and the recovery of Gaussianity. We find that such characteristic time is always related through a power-law to the onset time of Fickianity. The present findings suggest that FnGD in glass-formers may be characterized by a “universal” evolution of the distribution tails, independent from system dimensionality, at least for liquids with isotropic potential.
Universal Evolution of Fickian Non-Gaussian Diffusion in Two- and Three-Dimensional Glass-Forming Liquids / Rusciano, F.; Pastore, R.; Greco, F.. - In: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES. - ISSN 1422-0067. - 24:9(2023), p. 7871. [10.3390/ijms24097871]
Universal Evolution of Fickian Non-Gaussian Diffusion in Two- and Three-Dimensional Glass-Forming Liquids
Rusciano F.;Pastore R.
;Greco F.
2023
Abstract
Recent works show that glass-forming liquids display Fickian non-Gaussian Diffusion, with non-Gaussian displacement distributions persisting even at very long times, when linearity in the mean square displacement (Fickianity) has already been attained. Such non-Gaussian deviations temporarily exhibit distinctive exponential tails, with a decay length (Formula presented.) growing in time as a power-law. We herein carefully examine data from four different glass-forming systems with isotropic interactions, both in two and three dimensions, namely, three numerical models of molecular liquids and one experimentally investigated colloidal suspension. Drawing on the identification of a proper time range for reliable exponential fits, we find that a scaling law (Formula presented.), with (Formula presented.), holds for all considered systems, independently from dimensionality. We further show that, for each system, data at different temperatures/concentration can be collapsed onto a master-curve, identifying a characteristic time for the disappearance of exponential tails and the recovery of Gaussianity. We find that such characteristic time is always related through a power-law to the onset time of Fickianity. The present findings suggest that FnGD in glass-formers may be characterized by a “universal” evolution of the distribution tails, independent from system dimensionality, at least for liquids with isotropic potential.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.