Long-wavelength fluctuations and anomalous dynamics in 2-dimensional liquids

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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.

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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

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