Data di Pubblicazione:
2009
Abstract:
We report simulations of glassy arrest in hard-core particles with
short-range interparticle attraction. Previous experiments, theory,
and simulations suggest that in this kind of system, two qualita-
tively distinct kinds of glasses exist, dominated respectively by
repulsion and attraction. It is thought that in the former, particles
are trapped ''topologically,'' by nearest-neighbor cages, whereas
in the latter, nonergodicity is due to interparticle ''bonds.'' Subse-
quent experiments and simulations have suggested that bond
breaking destabilizes attractive glasses, but the long-term fate of
these arrested states remains unknown. By running simulations to
times a few orders of magnitude longer than those reached by
previous experiments or simulations, we show that arrest in an
attractive glass is, in the long run, also topological. Nevertheless,
it is still possible to distinguish between ''nonbonded'' and
''bonded'' repulsive glassy states. We study the melting of bonded
repulsive glasses into a hitherto unknown ''dense gel'' state, which
is distinct from dense, ergodic fluids. We propose a ''modified state
diagram'' for concentrated attractive particles, and discuss the
relevance of our results in the light of recent rheological measure-
ments in colloid-polymer mixtures.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Zaccarelli, Emanuela
Link alla scheda completa:
Pubblicato in: