Application of vibration-transit theory to distinct dynamic response for a monatomic liquid
We examine the distinct part of the density autocorrelation function Fd(q,t), also called the intermediate scattering function, from the point of view of the vibration-transit (V-T) theory of monatomic liquid dynamics. A similar study has been reported for the self part, and we study the self and di...
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Zusammenfassung: | We examine the distinct part of the density autocorrelation function Fd(q,t),
also called the intermediate scattering function, from the point of view of the
vibration-transit (V-T) theory of monatomic liquid dynamics. A similar study
has been reported for the self part, and we study the self and distinct parts
separately because their damping processes are not simply related. We begin
with the perfect vibrational system, which provides precise definitions of the
liquid correlations, and provides the vibrational approximation Fdvib(q,t) at
all q and t. Two independent liquid correlations are defined, motional and
structural, and these are decorrelated sequentially, with a crossover time
tc(q). This is done by two independent decorrelation processes: the first,
vibrational dephasing, is naturally present in Fdvib(q,t) and operates to damp
the motional correlation; the second, transit-induced decorrelation, is invoked
to enhance the damping of motional correlation, and then to damp the structural
correlation. A microscopic model is made for the "transit drift", the averaged
transit motion that damps motional correlation on 0 < t < tc(q). Following the
previously developed self-decorrelation theory, a microscopic model is also
made for the "transit random walk," which damps the structural correlation on t
> tc(q). The complete model incorporates a property common to both self and
distinct decorrelation: simple exponential decay following a delay period,
where the delay is tc(q, the time required for the random walk to emerge from
the drift. Our final result is an accurate expression for Fd(q,t) for all q
through the first peak in Sd(q). The theory is calibrated and tested using
molecular dynamics (MD) calculations for liquid Na at 395K; however, the theory
itself does not depend on MD, and we consider other means for calibrating it. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1305.3954 |