4.8 Article

Microscopic Origins of the Viscosity of a Lennard-Jones Liquid

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS
Volume 129, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.129.074503

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Institut Universitaire de France [A0090810637]

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Transport properties in liquids are difficult to describe from a microscopic perspective. In this study, we utilized molecular dynamics simulations to investigate the temperature dependence of viscosity and diffusion coefficient in Lennard-Jones fluid. We found that the free volume model can accurately describe the transport properties, and the parameters of the model can be estimated from local structural parameters obtained in the simulations.
Unlike crystalline solids or ideal gases, transport properties remain difficult to describe from a microscopic point of view in liquids, whose dynamics result from complex energetic and entropic contributions at the atomic scale. Two scenarios are generally proposed: one represents the dynamics in a fluid as a series of energy-barrier crossings, leading to Arrhenius-like laws, while the other assumes that atoms rearrange themselves by collisions, as exemplified by the free volume model. To assess the validity of these two views, we computed, using molecular dynamics simulations, the transport properties of the Lennard-Jones fluid and tested to what extent the Arrhenius equation and the free volume model describe the temperature dependence of the viscosity and of the diffusion coefficient at fixed pressure. Although both models reproduce the simulation results over a wide range of pressure and temperature covering the liquid and supercritical states of the Lennard-Jones fluid, we found that the parameters of the free volume model can be estimated directly from local structural parameters, also obtained in the simulations. This consistency of the results gives more credibility to the free volume description of transport properties in liquids.

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