Abstract

The relationship between spatially heterogeneous dynamics (SHD) and jamming is studied in a glass-forming binary Lennard-Jones system via molecular dynamics simulations. It has been suggested [Phys. ReV. Lett. 2001, 86, 111] 1 that the probability distribution of interparticle forces P(F) develops a peak at the glass transition temperature Tg and that the large force inhomogeneities, responsible for structural arrest in granular materials, are related to dynamical heterogeneities in supercooled liquids that form glasses. It has been further suggested that “force chains” present in granular materials may exist in supercooled liquids and may provide an order parameter for the glass transition. Our goal is to investigate the extent to which the forces experienced by particles in a glass-forming liquid are related to SHD and compare these forces to those observed in granular materials and other glass-forming systems. Our results are summarized as follows. We calculate P(F) for positive (repulsive) instantaneous forces and find no peak in P(F) at any temperature in our system, even below Tg. We also find that particles that have been localized for a long time are less likely to experience high relative force and that mobile particles experience higher relative forces at shorter time scales, indicating a correlation between pairwise forces and particle mobility. We construct force chains based on the magnitude of pairwise positive instantaneous forces. We find that force chains constructed in this manner are composed of both localized and mobile particles; therefore there is no one-to-one correspondence between force chains as defined here and locally mobile or immobile regions of the liquid. We also find that force chains do not play the same role as force chains in granular materials but may indicate a difference in the evolution of the local environment of particles with different mobility. We also discuss a possible relationship between force chains found here and the development of stringlike motion found in this and other glass-forming liquids [Phys. ReV. Lett. 1998, 80, 2338; J. Chem. Phys. 2004, 120, 4415]. 2,3

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