Abstract
All liquids (except helium owing to quantum effects) crystallize at low temperatures, forming ordered structures. The competition between disorder, which stabilizes the liquid phase, and energy, which leads to a preference for the crystalline structure, inevitably favours the crystal when the temperature is lowered and entropy becomes progressively less relevant. The liquid state survives at low temperatures only as a glass, an out-of-equilibrium arrested state of matter. This textbook description holds inevitably for atomic and molecular systems, where particle interactions are set by quantum-mechanical laws. The question remains whether it holds for colloidal particles, where interparticle interactions are usually short-ranged and tunable. Here we show that for patchy colloids with limited valence, conditions can be found for which the liquid phase is stable even in the zero-temperature limit. Our results offer fresh cues for understanding the stability of gels and the glass-forming ability of molecular network glasses. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited.
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CITATION STYLE
Smallenburg, F., & Sciortino, F. (2013). Liquids more stable than crystals in particles with limited valence and flexible bonds. Nature Physics, 9(9), 554–558. https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys2693
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