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Dive into the research topics where Kunimasa Miyazaki is active.

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Featured researches published by Kunimasa Miyazaki.


Nature | 2009

Soft colloids make strong glasses

Johan Mattsson; Hans M. Wyss; Alberto Fernandez-Nieves; Kunimasa Miyazaki; Zhibing Hu; David R. Reichman; David A. Weitz

Glass formation in colloidal suspensions has many of the hallmarks of glass formation in molecular materials. For hard-sphere colloids, which interact only as a result of excluded volume, phase behaviour is controlled by volume fraction, φ; an increase in φ drives the system towards its glassy state, analogously to a decrease in temperature, T, in molecular systems. When φ increases above φ* ≈ 0.53, the viscosity starts to increase significantly, and the system eventually moves out of equilibrium at the glass transition, φg ≈ 0.58, where particle crowding greatly restricts structural relaxation. The large particle size makes it possible to study both structure and dynamics with light scattering and imaging; colloidal suspensions have therefore provided considerable insight into the glass transition. However, hard-sphere colloidal suspensions do not exhibit the same diversity of behaviour as molecular glasses. This is highlighted by the wide variation in behaviour observed for the viscosity or structural relaxation time, τα, when the glassy state is approached in supercooled molecular liquids. This variation is characterized by the unifying concept of fragility, which has spurred the search for a ‘universal’ description of dynamic arrest in glass-forming liquids. For ‘fragile’ liquids, τα is highly sensitive to changes in T, whereas non-fragile, or ‘strong’, liquids show a much lower T sensitivity. In contrast, hard-sphere colloidal suspensions are restricted to fragile behaviour, as determined by their φ dependence, ultimately limiting their utility in the study of the glass transition. Here we show that deformable colloidal particles, when studied through their concentration dependence at fixed temperature, do exhibit the same variation in fragility as that observed in the T dependence of molecular liquids at fixed volume. Their fragility is dictated by elastic properties on the scale of individual colloidal particles. Furthermore, we find an equivalent effect in molecular systems, where elasticity directly reflects fragility. Colloidal suspensions may thus provide new insight into glass formation in molecular systems.


Physical Review Letters | 2007

Strain-Rate Frequency Superposition: A Rheological Probe of Structural Relaxation in Soft Materials

Hans M. Wyss; Kunimasa Miyazaki; Johan Mattsson; Zhibing Hu; David R. Reichman; David A. Weitz

The rheological properties of soft materials often exhibit surprisingly universal linear and nonlinear features. Here we show that these properties can be unified by considering the effect of the strain-rate amplitude on the structural relaxation of the material. We present a new form of oscillatory rheology, strain-rate frequency superposition (SRFS), where the strain-rate amplitude is fixed as the frequency is varied. We show that SRFS can isolate the response due to structural relaxation, even when it occurs at frequencies too low to be accessible with standard techniques.


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.


EPL | 2006

Nonlinear viscoelasticity of metastable complex fluids

Kunimasa Miyazaki; Hans M. Wyss; David A. Weitz; David R. Reichman

Many metastable complex fluids such as colloidal glasses and gels show distinct nonlinear viscoelasticity with increasing oscillatory-strain amplitude; the storage modulus decreases monotonically as the strain amplitude increases whereas the loss modulus has a distinct peak before it decreases at larger strains. We present a qualitative argument to explain this ubiquitous behavior and use mode-coupling theory (MCT) to confirm it. We compare theoretical predictions to the measured nonlinear viscoelasticity in a dense hard-sphere colloidal suspension; reasonable agreement is obtained. The argument given here can be used to obtain new information about linear viscoelasticity of metastable complex fluids from nonlinear strain measurements.


Physical Review Letters | 2005

Glasslike arrest in spinodal decomposition as a route to colloidal gelation

Suliana Manley; Hans M. Wyss; Kunimasa Miyazaki; Jacinta C. Conrad; V. Trappe; Laura J. Kaufman; David R. Reichman; David A. Weitz

Colloid-polymer mixtures can undergo spinodal decomposition into colloid-rich and colloid-poor regions. Gelation results when interconnected colloid-rich regions solidify. We show that this occurs when these regions undergo a glass transition, leading to dynamic arrest of the spinodal decomposition. The characteristic length scale of the gel decreases with increasing quench depth, and the nonergodicity parameter exhibits a pronounced dependence on scattering vector. Mode coupling theory gives a good description of the dynamics, provided we use the full static structure as input.


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.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Glass transition of the monodisperse Gaussian core model.

Atsushi Ikeda; Kunimasa Miyazaki

We numerically investigate the dynamical properties of the one-component Gaussian core model in supercooled states. We find that nucleation is increasingly suppressed with increasing density. The system concomitantly exhibits glassy, slow dynamics characterized by the two-step stretched exponential relaxation of the density correlation and a drastic increase of the relaxation time. We also find a weaker violation of the Stokes-Einstein relation and a smaller non-Gaussian parameter than in typical model glass formers, implying weaker dynamic heterogeneities. Additionally, the agreement of the simulation data with the prediction of mode-coupling theory is exceptionally good, indicating that the nature of the slow dynamics of this ultrasoft particle fluid is mean-field-like. This fact may be understood as a consequence of the long-range nature of the interaction.


Nature Physics | 2011

Quantum fluctuations can promote or inhibit glass formation

Thomas E. Markland; Joseph A. Morrone; B. J. Berne; Kunimasa Miyazaki; Eran Rabani; David R. Reichman

Intuition suggests that the occurrence of large quantum fluctuations should prevent a material from forming a glass by enabling its atoms to rearrange into a lower-energy ordered state. But new simulations suggest the opposite could be true, with fluctuations sometimes enhancing glass formation.


EPL | 2009

Slow dynamics in random media: Crossover from glass to localization transition

Kang Kim; Kunimasa Miyazaki; Shinji Saito

We study slow dynamics of particles moving in a matrix of immobile obstacles using molecular-dynamics simulations. The glass transition point decreases drastically as the obstacle density increases. At higher obstacle densities, the dynamics of mobile particles changes qualitatively from glass-like to a Lorentz-gas-like relaxation. This crossover is studied by density correlation functions, nonergodic parameters, mean square displacement, and nonlinear dynamic susceptibility. Our finding is qualitatively consistent with the results of recent numerical and theoretical studies on various spatially heterogeneous systems. Furthermore, we show that slow dynamics is surprisingly rich and sensitive to obstacle configurations. Especially, the reentrant transition is observed for a particular configuration, although its origin is not directly linked to the similar prediction based on the mode-coupling theory.

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Kang Kim

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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Giulio Biroli

École Normale Supérieure

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Hans M. Wyss

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Misaki Ozawa

University of Montpellier

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Walter Kob

University of Montpellier

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