Glassy dynamics of kinetically constrained models
Felix Ritort,Peter Sollich +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors review the use of kinetically constrained models (KCMs) for the study of dynamics in glassy systems, including spin-facilitated (Ising) models, constrained lattice gases, models inspired by cellular structures such as soap froths, models obtained via mappings from interacting systems without constraints, and related models such as urn, oscillator, tiling and needle models.
read more
Abstract: We review the use of kinetically constrained models (KCMs) for the study of dynamics in glassy systems. The characteristic feature of KCMs is that they have trivial, often non-interacting, equilibrium behaviour but interesting slow dynamics due to restrictions on the allowed transitions between configurations. The basic question which KCMs ask is therefore how much glassy physics can be understood without an underlying ‘equilibrium glass transition’. After a brief review of glassy phenomenology, we describe the main model classes, which include spin-facilitated (Ising) models, constrained lattice gases, models inspired by cellular structures such as soap froths, models obtained via mappings from interacting systems without constraints, and finally related models such as urn, oscillator, tiling and needle models. We then describe the broad range of techniques that have been applied to KCMs, including exact solutions, adiabatic approximations, projection and mode-coupling techniques, diagrammatic approaches and mappings to quantum systems or effective models. Finally, we give a survey of the known results for the dynamics of KCMs both in and out of equilibrium, including topics such as relaxation time divergences and dynamical transitions, nonlinear relaxation, ageing and effective temperatures, cooperativity and dynamical heterogeneities, and finally non-equilibrium stationary states generated by external driving. We conclude with a discussion of open questions and possibilities for future work.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Theoretical perspective on the glass transition and amorphous materials
Ludovic Berthier,Giulio Biroli +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, a theoretical perspective is provided on the glass transition in molecular liquids at thermal equilibrium, on the spatially heterogeneous and aging dynamics of disordered materials, and on the rheology of soft glassy materials.
2.3K
Electronic properties of disordered two-dimensional carbon
TL;DR: In this article, the effects of localized (impurities or vacancies) and extended (edges or grain boundaries) defects on the electronic and transport properties of graphene are analyzed in a self-consistent way.
1.6K
Colloquium : The glass transition and elastic models of glass-forming liquids
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reviewed the basic characteristics of the liquid-glass transition, emphasizing its universality and briefly summarizing the most popular phenomenological models, focusing on a number of alternative models which one way or the other connect the fast and slow degrees of freedom of viscous liquids.
A Modern Course in Statistical Physics
TL;DR: Reichl as mentioned in this paper brought together so many aspects of statistical physics in a comprehensible manner, including stochastic theory, theories of quantum fluids and critical phenomena, nonlinear chemical physics and hydrodynamics.
1.2K
Universal physical responses to stretch in the living cell
Xavier Trepat,Linhong Deng,Linhong Deng,Steven S. An,Steven S. An,Daniel Navajas,Daniel J. Tschumperlin,William T. Gerthoffer,James P. Butler,Jeffrey J. Fredberg +9 more
TL;DR: The results support the idea that the cell interior is at once a crowded chemical space and a fragile soft material in which the effects of biochemistry, molecular crowding and physical forces are complex and inseparable, yet conspire nonetheless to yield remarkably simple phenomenological laws.
762
References
Glass transition, competing energy, and the tiling model.
TL;DR: The glass-transition point of the square-tiling model is shown not to be an isolated point but a point of confluence of a large number of higher-order phase transition lines.
•Book
Theory of simple liquids
J.‐P. Hansen,I. R. Mcdonald,Douglas Henderson +2 more
- 01 Jan 1976
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a mathematical model for time-dependent correlation functions and response functions in liquid solvers, based on statistical mechanics and molecular distribution functions, and show that these functions are related to time correlation functions in Ionic and Ionic liquids.
A diagrammatic theory of time correlation functions of facilitated kinetic Ising models
Steven J. Pitts,Hans C. Andersen +1 more
TL;DR: A diagrammatic formulation of the kinetic theory of time correlation functions for facilitated kinetic Ising models with directed constraints is presented, accurate at short and intermediate times for all up-spin concentrations and for all times at high up- spin concentratio...
Metastability in a four-spin Ising model
Adam Lipowski,Des Johnston +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the 3D four-spin interaction Ising model exhibits rather strong metastability in a broad range of temperatures around its first-order transition point, due to the shape dependence of excitations in the model and the resulting largeness of the associated critical droplets.
•Posted Content
Out of equilibrium dynamics in spin-glasses and other glassy systems
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review recent theoretical progress on glassy dynamics, with special emphasis on the importance and universality of the ''aging regime'' which is relevant to many experimental situations.