2018
DOI: 10.1103/physreve.97.062124
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Stokes-Einstein relation of the liquid metal rubidium and its relationship to changes in the microscopic dynamics with increasing temperature

Abstract: For liquid rubidium the Stokes-Einstein (SE) relation is well fulfilled near the melting point with an effective hydrodynamic diameter, which agrees well with a value from structural investigations. A wealth of thermodynamic and microscopic data exists for a wide range of temperatures for liquid rubidium and hence it represents a good test bed to challenge the SE relation with rising temperature from an experimental point of view. We performed classical molecular dynamics simulations to complement the existing… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Interestingly, this change is close to a temperature , which was derived as a thermodynamic stability limit of the solid crystalline state of aluminium 31 , and beyond which no superheated metastable solid aluminium may survive.. That temperature agrees well with the increase in the amplitude , which is a measure for the decay of density fluctuations on next-neighbor distances. The amplitude can be related directly to an average relaxation time for the density fluctuations 33 and hence evidences a slowing down of the dynamics.
Figure 3 The relaxation times from the KWW-fits to the simulation and X-ray data are plotted against the inverse temperature on a logarithmic scale.
…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interestingly, this change is close to a temperature , which was derived as a thermodynamic stability limit of the solid crystalline state of aluminium 31 , and beyond which no superheated metastable solid aluminium may survive.. That temperature agrees well with the increase in the amplitude , which is a measure for the decay of density fluctuations on next-neighbor distances. The amplitude can be related directly to an average relaxation time for the density fluctuations 33 and hence evidences a slowing down of the dynamics.
Figure 3 The relaxation times from the KWW-fits to the simulation and X-ray data are plotted against the inverse temperature on a logarithmic scale.
…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For monatomic liquid metals changes with temperature were found in the structural relaxation dynamics on an atomistic length scale for rubidium, lead, and aluminium [8][9][10]. The amplitude S(Q 0 , ω = 0) of the collective dynamics at the structure factor maximum Q 0 showed in all three cases a change in the slope in a similar temperature range above the * franz.demmel@stfc.ac.uk melting temperature [11]. Furthermore, for all three metals an increase of the generalized longitudinal viscosity was demonstrated which occurs in a temperature range of 1.3-1.5 T m upon cooling, suggesting that the liquid metals become more viscous around this temperature range.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…These changes are based on fluctuations on an atomic length scale. However, recently the scrutiny of macroscopic transport coefficients of liquid rubidium and their product, the Stokes-Einstein relation, suggested that the change in dynamics also shows some fingerprints in the macroscopic transport parameters [56]. Furthermore the evolution of excitations with rising temperature indicated a change in collective particle dynamics in that temperature range [57].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%