Abstract
In 2-dimensional systems at finite temperature, long-wavelength Mermin–Wagner fluctuations prevent the existence of translational long-range order. Their dynamical signature, which is the divergence of the vibrational amplitude with the system size, also affects disordered solids, and it washes out the transient solid-like response generally exhibited by liquids cooled below their melting temperatures. Through a combined numerical and experimental investigation, here we show that long-wavelength fluctuations are also relevant at high temperature, where the liquid dynamics do not reveal a transient solid-like response. In this regime, these fluctuations induce an unusual but ubiquitous decoupling between long-time diffusion coefficient D and structural relaxation time τ, where D ∝ τ −κ, with κ > 1. Long-wavelength fluctuations have a negligible influence on the relaxation dynamics only at extremely high temperatures in molecular liquids or at extremely low densities in colloidal systems.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Li, Y. W., Mishra, C. K., Sun, Z. Y., Zhao, K., Mason, T. G., Ganapathy, R., & Ciamarra, M. P. (2019). Long-wavelength fluctuations and anomalous dynamics in 2-dimensional liquids. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 116(46), 22977–22982. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1909319116
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.