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Correlations between short- and long-time relaxation in colloidal supercooled liquids and glasses.

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Spatiotemporal dynamics of short- and long-time structural relaxation are measured experimentally as a function of packing fraction, ϕ, in quasi-two-dimensional colloidal supercooled liquids and glasses. The relaxation times associated with… Click to show full abstract

Spatiotemporal dynamics of short- and long-time structural relaxation are measured experimentally as a function of packing fraction, ϕ, in quasi-two-dimensional colloidal supercooled liquids and glasses. The relaxation times associated with long-time dynamic heterogeneity and short-time intracage motion are found to be strongly correlated and to grow by orders of magnitude with increasing ϕ toward dynamic arrest. We find that clusters of fast particles on the two timescales often overlap, and, interestingly, the distribution of minimum-spatial-separation between closest nonoverlapping clusters across the two timescales is revealed to be exponential with a decay length that increases with ϕ. In total, the experimental observations suggest short-time relaxation events are very often precursors to heterogeneous relaxation at longer timescales in glassy materials.

Keywords: relaxation; time; colloidal supercooled; short long; supercooled liquids; long time

Journal Title: Physical Review E
Year Published: 2019

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