Beyond Pair Entropy: Orientational Many-Body Correlations in Supercooled Glass-Forming Liquids from a Four-Point Structural Entropy
Abstract
The conventional pair entropy S2, derived from the isotropic radial distribution function g(r), systematically underestimates structural ordering in supercooled glass-forming liquids. We argue that this failure arises because S2, constructed from the isotropic g(r), is inherently insensitive to the many-body orientational correlations that become accessible only through a four-point conditional distribution evaluated in a local particle-centered frame. To recover this information, we introduce a three-dimensional four-point structural entropy S3D, constructed from the four-point conditional distribution function g(r, θ, φ) evaluated in a local particle-centered reference frame, and derive its exact decomposition into a radial contribution S2 and a weighted orientational entropy SΩ. Applying this framework to the canonical KA binary mixture, we find that SΩ accounts for a substantial fraction of S3D across the full temperature range studied, reflecting genuine icosahedral and dodecahedral angular ordering present at all temperatures — as independently established by Zhang and Kob - rather than a numerical artifact. These results demonstrate that g(r, θ, φ) encodes angular structural information entirely invisible to the conventional g(r) and to the thermodynamic excess entropy Sex, and that S3D provides a tractable thermodynamic measure of packing-driven orientational ordering across the supercooled regime.
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