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On approaching the glass transition, the microscopic kinetic unit spends increasing time rattling in the cage of the first neighbours whereas its average escape time, the structural relaxation time $tau_alpha$, increases from a few picoseconds up to thousands of seconds. A thorough study of the correlation between $tau_alpha$ and the rattling amplitude, expressed by the Debye-Waller factor (DW), was carried out. Molecular-dynamics (MD) simulations of both a model polymer system and a binary mixture were performed by varying the temperature, the density $rho$, the potential and the polymer length to consider the structural relaxation as well as both the rotational and the translation diffusion. The simulations evidence the scaling between the $tau_alpha$ and the Debye-Waller factor. An analytic model of the master curve is developed in terms of two characteristic length scales pertaining to the distance to be covered by the kinetic unit to reach a transition state. The model does not imply $tau_alpha$ divergences. The comparison with the experiments supports the numerical evidence over a range of relaxation times as wide as about eighteen orders of magnitude. A comparison with other scaling and correlation procedures is presented. The study suggests that the equilibrium and the moderately supercooled states of the glassformers possess key information on the huge slowing-down of their relaxation close to the glass transition. The latter, according to the present simulations, exhibits features consistent with the Lindemann melting criterion and the free-volume model.
We theoretically investigate structural relaxation and activated diffusion of glass-forming liquids at different pressures using both the Elastically Collective Nonlinear Langevin Equation (ECNLE) theory and molecular dynamics (MD) simulation. An ext
The sluggish and heterogeneous dynamics of glass forming liquids is frequently associated to the transient coexistence of two phases of particles, respectively with an high and low mobility. In the absence of a dynamical order parameter that acquires
One of the central problems of the liquid-glass transition is whether there is a structural signature that can qualitatively distinguish different dynamic behaviors at different degrees of supercooling. Here, we propose a novel structural characteriz
We develop the elastically collective nonlinear Langevin equation theory of bulk relaxation of glass-forming liquids to investigate molecular mobility under compression conditions. The applied pressure restricts more molecular motion and therefore si
We numerically study the relaxation dynamics of several glass-forming models to their inherent structures, following quenches from equilibrium configurations sampled across a wide range of temperatures. In a mean-field Mari-Kurchan model, we find tha