Glassy dynamics in asymmetric binary mixtures of hard spheres
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We perform a systematic and detailed study of the glass transition in highly asymmetric binary mixtures of colloidal hard spheres, combining differential dynamic microscopy experiments, event-driven molecular dynamics simulations, and theoretical calculations, exploring the whole state diagram and determining the self-dynamics and collective dynamics of both species. Two distinct glassy states involving different dynamical arrest transitions are consistently described, namely, a double glass with the simultaneous arrest of the self-dynamics and collective dynamics of both species, and a single glass of large particles in which the self-dynamics of the small species remains ergodic. In the single-glass scenario, spatial modulations in the collective dynamics of both species occur due to the structure of the large spheres, a feature not observed in the double-glass domain. The theoretical results, obtained within the self-consistent generalized Langevin equation formalism, are in agreement with both simulations and experimental data, thus providing a stringent validation of this theoretical framework in the description of dynamical arrest in highly asymmetric mixtures. Our findings are summarized in a state diagram that classifies the various amorphous states of highly asymmetric mixtures by their dynamical arrest mechanisms. © 2019 American Physical Society.
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212 Grant
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Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología, CONACYT: 182132, 237425, 242364, 287067, 358254, CB-2015-01-257636, FC-2015-2/1155, LANIMFE-279887-2017 Grant
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Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst, DAAD Grant
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Fundación Marcos Moshinsky Grant
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German-Israeli Foundation for Scientific Research and Development, GIF: I-1345-303.10/2016 Grant
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Universidad de Guanajuato, UG Grant
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Research
keywords
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Differential equations; Glass; Glass transition; Molecular dynamics; Spheres; Asymmetric mixtures; Collective dynamics; Colloidal hard spheres; Generalized Langevin equation; Molecular dynamics simulations; Spatial modulations; Theoretical calculations; Theoretical framework; Binary mixtures
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