Interplay between percolation and glassiness in the random Lorentz gas.
Abstract
The random Lorentz gas (RLG) is a minimal model of transport in heterogeneous media
that exhibits a continuous localization transition controlled by void space percolation.
The RLG also provides a toy model of particle caging, which is known to be relevant
for describing the discontinuous dynamical transition of glasses. In order to clarify
the interplay between the seemingly incompatible percolation and caging descriptions
of the RLG, we consider its exact mean-field solution in the infinite-dimensional
d→∞ limit and perform numerics in d=2...20. We find that for sufficiently high d the
mean-field caging transition precedes and prevents the percolation transition, which
only happens on timescales diverging with d. We further show that activated processes
related to rare cage escapes destroy the glass transition in finite dimensions, leading
to a rich interplay between glassiness and percolation physics. This advance suggests
that the RLG can be used as a toy model to develop a first-principle description of
particle hopping in structural glasses.
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24985Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1103/physreve.103.l030104Publication Info
Biroli, Giulio; Charbonneau, Patrick; Corwin, Eric I; Hu, Yi; Ikeda, Harukuni; Szamel,
Grzegorz; & Zamponi, Francesco (2021). Interplay between percolation and glassiness in the random Lorentz gas. Physical review. E, 103(3). pp. L030104. 10.1103/physreve.103.l030104. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24985.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Patrick Charbonneau
Professor of Chemistry
Professor Charbonneau studies soft matter. His work combines theory and simulation
to understand the glass problem, protein crystallization, microphase formation, and colloidal
assembly in external fields.

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