6533b821fe1ef96bd127b7bd
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Nonlinear response functions in an exponential trap model
Gregor Diezemannsubject
Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Field (physics)Condensed matter physicsChemistryFOS: Physical sciencesCondensed Matter - Soft Condensed MatterCondensed Matter PhysicsKinetic energyElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsExponential functionNonlinear systemCorrelation function (statistical mechanics)Computational chemistryMaterials ChemistryCeramics and CompositesSoft Condensed Matter (cond-mat.soft)Limit (mathematics)ScalingCondensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsVariable (mathematics)description
The nonlinear response to an oscillating field is calculated for a kinetic trap model with an exponential density of states and the results are compared to those for the model with a Gaussian density of states. The calculations are limited to the high temperature phase of the model. It is found that the results are qualitatively different only in a temperature range near the glass transition temperature $T_0$ of the exponential model. While for the Gaussian model the choice of the dynamical variable that couples to the field has no impact on the shape of the linear response, this is different for the exponential model. Here, it is found that also the relaxation time strongly depends on the variable chosen. Furthermore, the modulus of the frequency dependent third-order response shows either a peak or exhibits a monotonuous decay from a finite low-frequency limit to a vanishing response at high frequencies depending on the dynamical variable. For variables that give rise to a peak in the modulus it is found that its height either increases or decreases as a function of temperature, again depending on the details of the choice of the variable. The peak value of the modulus shows a scaling behavior near $T_0$. It is found that for some variables the low-frequency limit of the cubic response diverges at the glass transition temperature and also at a further temperature determined by the particular variable. A recently proposed approximation that relates the cubic response to a four-time correlation function does not give reliable results due to a wrong estimate of the low-frequency limit of the response.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2014-07-16 |