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Dive into the research topics where Giulio Biroli is active.

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Featured researches published by Giulio Biroli.


Reviews of Modern Physics | 2011

Theoretical perspective on the glass transition and amorphous materials

Ludovic Berthier; Giulio Biroli

A theoretical perspective is provided on the glass transition in molecular liquids at thermal equilibrium, on the spatially heterogeneous and aging dynamics of disordered materials, and on the rheology of soft glassy materials. We start with a broad introduction to the field and emphasize its connections with other subjects and its relevance. The important role played by computer simulations in studying and understanding the dynamics of systems close to the glass transition at the molecular level is given. The recent progress on the subject of the spatially heterogeneous dynamics that characterizes structural relaxation in materials with slow dynamics is reviewed. The main theoretical approaches are presented describing the glass transition in supercooled liquids, focusing on theories that have a microscopic, statistical mechanics basis. We describe both successes and failures and critically assess the current status of each of these approaches. The physics of aging dynamics in disordered materials and the rheology of soft glassy materials are then discussed, and recent theoretical progress is described. For each section, an extensive overview is given of the most recent advances, but we also describe in some detail the important open problems that will occupy a central place in this field in the coming years.


Science | 2005

Direct experimental evidence of a growing length scale accompanying the glass transition

Ludovic Berthier; Giulio Biroli; J.-P. Bouchaud; Luca Cipelletti; D. El Masri; D. L'Hôte; F. Ladieu; M. Pierno

Understanding glass formation is a challenge, because the existence of a true glass state, distinct from liquid and solid, remains elusive: Glasses are liquids that have become too viscous to flow. An old idea, as yet unproven experimentally, is that the dynamics becomes sluggish as the glass transition approaches, because increasingly larger regions of the material have to move simultaneously to allow flow. We introduce new multipoint dynamical susceptibilities to estimate quantitatively the size of these regions and provide direct experimental evidence that the glass formation of molecular liquids and colloidal suspensions is accompanied by growing dynamic correlation length scales.


Archive | 2011

Dynamical heterogeneities in glasses, colloids, and granular media

Ludovic Berthier; Giulio Biroli; Jean-Philippe Bouchaud; Luca Cipelletti; Wim van Saarloos

1. Scientic interview on the glass transition 2. An overview of the theories of the glass transition 3. Overview of different characterisations of dynamic heterogeneity 4. Glassy dynamics and dynamical heterogeneity in colloids 5. Experimental Approaches to Heterogeneous Dynamics 6. Dynamical Heterogeneities in Grains and Foams 7. The Length Scales of Dynamic Heterogeneity: Results from Molecular Dynamics Simulations 8. Heterogeneities in amorphous systems under shear 9. The jamming scenario an introduction and outlook 10. Kinetically Constrained Models 11. Growing length scales in aging systems 12. Analytical approaches to time and length scales in models of glasses


Physical Review E | 2007

Spatial correlations in the dynamics of glassforming liquids : Experimental determination of their temperature dependence

Cécile Dalle-Ferrier; C. Thibierge; Christiane Alba-Simionesco; Ludovic Berthier; Giulio Biroli; Jean-Philippe Bouchaud; F. Ladieu; D. L’Hôte; Gilles Tarjus

We use recently introduced three-point dynamic susceptibilities to obtain an experimental determination of the temperature evolution of the number of molecules Ncorr that are dynamically correlated during the structural relaxation of supercooled liquids. We first discuss in detail the physical content of three-point functions that relate the sensitivity of the averaged two-time dynamics to external control parameters (such as temperature or density), as well as their connection to the more standard four-point dynamic susceptibility associated with dynamical heterogeneities. We then demonstrate that these functions can be experimentally determined with good precision. We gather available data to obtain the temperature dependence of Ncorr for a large number of supercooled liquids over a wide range of relaxation time scales from the glass transition up to the onset of slow dynamics. We find that Ncorr systematically grows when approaching the glass transition. It does so in a modest manner close to the glass transition, which is consistent with an activation-based picture of the dynamics in glassforming materials. For higher temperatures, there appears to be a regime where Ncorr behaves as a power-law of the relaxation time. Finally, we find that the dynamic response to density, while being smaller than the dynamic response to temperature, behaves similarly, in agreement with theoretical expectations.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Inhomogeneous mode-coupling theory and growing dynamic length in supercooled liquids.

Giulio Biroli; Jean-Philippe Bouchaud; Kunimasa Miyazaki; David R. Reichman

We extend mode-coupling theory (MCT) to inhomogeneous situations, relevant for supercooled liquid in an external field. We compute the response of the dynamical structure factor to a static inhomogeneous external potential and provide the first direct evidence that the standard formulation of MCT is associated with a diverging length scale. We find that the so-called cages are, in fact, extended objects. Although close to the transition the dynamic length grows as |T-T(c)|(-1/4) in both the beta and alpha regimes, our results suggest that the fractal dimension of correlated clusters is larger in the alpha regime. We derive inhomogeneous MCT equations valid to second order in gradients.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2007

Spontaneous and induced dynamic fluctuations in glass-formers I: General results and dependence on ensemble and dynamics

Ludovic Berthier; Giulio Biroli; Jean-Philippe Bouchaud; Walter Kob; Kunimasa Miyazaki; David R. Reichman

We study theoretically and numerically a family of multipoint dynamic susceptibilities that quantify the strength and characteristic length scales of dynamic heterogeneities in glass-forming materials. We use general theoretical arguments (fluctuation-dissipation relations and symmetries of relevant dynamical field theories) to relate the sensitivity of averaged two-time correlators to temperature and density to spontaneous fluctuations of the local dynamics. Our theoretical results are then compared to molecular dynamics simulations of the Newtonian, Brownian, and Monte Carlo dynamics of two representative glass-forming liquids, a fragile binary Lennard-Jones mixture, and a model for the strong glass-former silica. We justify in detail the claim made by Berthier et al. [Science 310, 1797 (2005)] that the temperature dependence of correlation functions allows one to extract useful information on dynamic length scales in glassy systems. We also discuss some subtle issues associated with the choice of microscopic dynamics and of statistical ensemble through conserved quantities, which are found to play an important role in determining dynamic correlations.


Physical Review E | 2005

Dynamical susceptibility of glass formers: Contrasting the predictions of theoretical scenarios

Cristina Toninelli; Matthieu Wyart; Ludovic Berthier; Giulio Biroli; Jean-Philippe Bouchaud

We compute analytically and numerically the four-point correlation function that characterizes non-trivial cooperative dynamics in glassy systems within several models of glasses: elasto-plastic deformations, mode-coupling theory (MCT), collectively rearranging regions (CRR), diffusing defects and kinetically constrained models (KCM). Some features of the four-point susceptibility chi_4(t) are expected to be universal. at short times we expect an elastic regime characterized by a t or sqrt{t} growth. We find both in the beta, and the early alpha regime that chi_4 sim t^mu, where mu is directly related to the mechanism responsible for relaxation. This regime ends when a maximum of chi_4 is reached at a time t=t^* of the order of the relaxation time of the system. This maximum is followed by a fast decay to zero at large times. The height of the maximum also follows a power-law, chi_4(t^*) sim t^{*lambda}. The value of the exponents mu and lambda allows one to distinguish between different mechanisms. For example, freely diffusing defects in d=3 lead to mu=2 and lambda=1, whereas the CRR scenario rather predicts either mu=1 or a logarithmic behaviour depending on the nature of the nucleation events, and a logarithmic behaviour of chi_4(t^*). MCT leads to mu=b and lambda =1/gamma, where b and gamma are the standard MCT exponents. We compare our theoretical results with numerical simulations on a Lennard-Jones and a soft-sphere system. Within the limited time-scales accessible to numerical simulations, we find that the exponent mu is rather small, mu<1, with a value in reasonable agreement with the MCT predictions.


Physical Review Letters | 2005

Dynamical Heterogeneity Close to the Jamming Transition in a Sheared Granular Material

Olivier Dauchot; Guillaume Marty; Giulio Biroli

The dynamics of a bidimensional dense granular packing under cyclic shear is experimentally investigated close to the jamming transition. Measurement of multipoint correlation functions are produced. The self-intermediate scattering function, displaying slower than exponential relaxation, suggests dynamic heterogeneity. Further analysis of four point correlation functions reveal that the grain relaxations are strongly correlated and spatially heterogeneous, especially at the time scale of the collective rearrangements. Finally, a dynamical correlation length is extracted from a spatiotemporal pattern of mobility. Our experimental results open the way to a systematic study of dynamic correlation functions in granular materials.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Effect of rare fluctuations on the thermalization of isolated quantum systems.

Giulio Biroli; Corinna Kollath; Andreas M. Läuchli

We consider the question of thermalization for isolated quantum systems after a sudden parameter change, a so-called quantum quench. In particular, we investigate the prerequisites for thermalization, focusing on the statistical properties of the time-averaged density matrix and of the expectation values of observables in the final eigenstates. We find that eigenstates, which are rare compared to the typical ones sampled by the microcanonical distribution, are responsible for the absence of thermalization of some infinite integrable models and play an important role for some nonintegrable systems of finite size, such as the Bose-Hubbard model. We stress the importance of finite size effects for the thermalization of isolated quantum systems and discuss two scenarios for thermalization.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2007

Spontaneous and induced dynamic correlations in glass formers. II. Model calculations and comparison to numerical simulations.

Ludovic Berthier; Giulio Biroli; Jean-Philippe Bouchaud; Walter Kob; Kunimasa Miyazaki; David R. Reichman

We study in detail the predictions of various theoretical approaches, in particular, mode-coupling theory (MCT) and kinetically constrained models (KCMs), concerning the time, temperature, and wave vector dependence of multipoint correlation functions that quantify the strength of both induced and spontaneous dynamical fluctuations. We also discuss the precise predictions of MCT concerning the statistical ensemble and microscopic dynamics dependence of these multipoint correlation functions. These predictions are compared to simulations of model fragile and strong glass-forming liquids. Overall, MCT fares quite well in the fragile case, in particular, explaining the observed crucial role of the statistical ensemble and microscopic dynamics, while MCT predictions do not seem to hold in the strong case. KCMs provide a simplified framework for understanding how these multipoint correlation functions may encode dynamic correlations in glassy materials. However, our analysis highlights important unresolved questions concerning the application of KCMs to supercooled liquids.

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F. Ladieu

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Rémi Monasson

École Normale Supérieure

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Raphaël Candelier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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