Diffusion in liquid metals is directed by competing collective modes

Abstract

The self-diffusion process in a dense liquid is influenced by collective particle movements. Extensive molecular dynamics simulations for liquid aluminium and rubidium evidence a crossover in the diffusion coefficient at about 1.4 times the melting temperature Tm, indicating a profound change in the diffusion mechanism. The corresponding velocity auto-correlation functions demonstrate a decrease of the cage effect with a gradual set-in of a power-law decay, the celebrate long time tail. This behavior is caused by a competition of density fluctuations near the melting point with vortex-type particle patterns from transverse currents in the hot fluid. The investigation of the velocity autocorrelation function evidences a gradual transition in dynamics with rising temperature. The competition between these two collective particle movements, one hindering and one enhancing the diffusion process, leads to a non-Arrhenius-type behavior of the diffusion coefficient around 1.4~Tm, which signals the transition from a dense to a fluid-like liquid dynamics in the potential energy landscape picture.

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