A simple model featuring a double well potential is used to represent a liquid that is quenched from an ergodic state into a history dependent glassy state. Issues surrounding the application of the Jarzynski Equality to glass formation are investigated. We demonstrate that the Jarzynski Equality gives the free energy difference between the initial state and the state we would obtain if the glass relaxed to true thermodynamic equilibrium. We derive new variations of the Jarzynski Equality which are relevant to the history dependent glassy state rather than the underlying equilibrium state. It is shown how to compute the free energy differences for the nonequilibrium history dependent glassy state such that it remains consistent wit...
The well-known Jarzynski equality, often written in the form e − β Δ F = 〈 e − β W 〉 ...
International audienceAs a contribution to the residual entropy debate for glasses, we have made sim...
International audienceA glass is a non-equilibrium thermodynamic state whose physical properties dep...
A simple model featuring a double well potential is used to represent a liquid that is quenched from...
The free energy of glasses cannot be estimated using thermodynamic integration as glasses are intrin...
Measuring free energy differences between states is of fundamental importance to understanding and p...
Measuring free energy differences between states is of fundamental importance to understanding and p...
We examine the question of whether the formal expressions of equilibrium statistical mechanics can ...
In this short communication, I give a very simple derivation of the Jarzynski equality, which allows...
The transition between a regime in which thermodynamic relations apply only to ensembles of small sy...
International audienceWe have experimentally checked the Jarzynski equality and the Crooks relation ...
A thermodynamic expression for the analog of the canonical ensemble for nonequilibrium systems is de...
Classical description of thermodynamic properties during glass transition has been questioned by the...
PACS. 02.50.-r – Probability theory, stochastic processes, and statistics. PACS. 05.70.Ln – Nonequil...
ArticleThis version: arXiv:1404.5181v1 [cond-mat.stat-mech]. Available from ArXiv.org via the link i...
The well-known Jarzynski equality, often written in the form e − β Δ F = 〈 e − β W 〉 ...
International audienceAs a contribution to the residual entropy debate for glasses, we have made sim...
International audienceA glass is a non-equilibrium thermodynamic state whose physical properties dep...
A simple model featuring a double well potential is used to represent a liquid that is quenched from...
The free energy of glasses cannot be estimated using thermodynamic integration as glasses are intrin...
Measuring free energy differences between states is of fundamental importance to understanding and p...
Measuring free energy differences between states is of fundamental importance to understanding and p...
We examine the question of whether the formal expressions of equilibrium statistical mechanics can ...
In this short communication, I give a very simple derivation of the Jarzynski equality, which allows...
The transition between a regime in which thermodynamic relations apply only to ensembles of small sy...
International audienceWe have experimentally checked the Jarzynski equality and the Crooks relation ...
A thermodynamic expression for the analog of the canonical ensemble for nonequilibrium systems is de...
Classical description of thermodynamic properties during glass transition has been questioned by the...
PACS. 02.50.-r – Probability theory, stochastic processes, and statistics. PACS. 05.70.Ln – Nonequil...
ArticleThis version: arXiv:1404.5181v1 [cond-mat.stat-mech]. Available from ArXiv.org via the link i...
The well-known Jarzynski equality, often written in the form e − β Δ F = 〈 e − β W 〉 ...
International audienceAs a contribution to the residual entropy debate for glasses, we have made sim...
International audienceA glass is a non-equilibrium thermodynamic state whose physical properties dep...