2012
DOI: 10.1063/1.3685804
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Communication: Thermodynamics of condensed matter with strong pressure-energy correlations

Abstract: We show that for any liquid or solid with strong correlation between its NVT virial and potential-energy equilibrium fluctuations, the temperature is a product of a function of excess entropy per particle and a function of density, T = f(s)h(ρ). This implies that (1) the system's isomorphs (curves in the phase diagram of invariant structure and dynamics) are described by h(ρ)/T = Const., (2) the density-scaling exponent is a function of density only, and (3) a Grüneisen-type equation of state applies for the c… Show more

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Cited by 88 publications
(166 citation statements)
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“…It was shown recently [37] that for simple liquids and solids, temperature can be written as a product of a function of the excess entropy per particle, s, and a function of density: T = f (s)h(ρ). Accordingly, one can generate curves of constant excess entropy by requiring [37,38] that…”
Section: Generating Isomorphic State Pointsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…It was shown recently [37] that for simple liquids and solids, temperature can be written as a product of a function of the excess entropy per particle, s, and a function of density: T = f (s)h(ρ). Accordingly, one can generate curves of constant excess entropy by requiring [37,38] that…”
Section: Generating Isomorphic State Pointsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Another consequence of the isomorph theory is an expression for h(ρ) for atomic liquids with interaction potentials consisting of a sum of inverse power laws, v(r) = n v n r −n . For such liquids h(ρ) is given as follows [37,38] …”
Section: Generating Isomorphic State Pointsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The isomorph theory predicts "isomorph scaling", i.e., that the dynamics is a function of h(ρ)/T , where h(ρ) depends on the system [30,46]. For atomic systems interacting via a pair potential that is the sum of IPL potentials υ(r) = n υ n r −n , h(ρ) is given by h(ρ) = n C n ρ n/3 , where the constants C n are the fractional contributions of each term to the heat capacity [30,46].…”
Section: Isomorph Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Figure 2 displays the correlation between log(T g ) and log(V g ) that varies linearly only in the low-pressure regime. According to isomorph theory [27][28][29][30], the scaling exponent is not constant, but generally is a function of density. Thus, a natural question is whether the departures at higher pressures in our computations arise from using a constant value of γ.…”
Section: B Testing Thermodynamic Scalingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The study of thermodynamic scaling has triggered the proposal of several novel concepts by Dyre and coworkers, such as that of "strongly correlating liquids" (i.e., liquids with strong correlations between equilibrium fluctuations of the potential energy and the virial in a canonical ensemble) and "isomorphs" (i.e., curves in the phase diagram along which structure, dynamics, and some thermodynamic properties are invariant in reduced units) . [23][24][25][26][27][28] The isomorph theory indicates that the scaling exponent γ is not constant, but depends on density, [27][28][29][30] and the power-law form ρ γ is only a special case. However, the power-law density scaling is a useful approximation to the isomorph scaling since a number of experiments find a weak dependence of γ on density under certain thermodynamic conditions [4][5][6] and since using a constant value of γ leads to collapse onto a master curve of the dynamics in glass-forming liquids.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%