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Thermodynamic Origin of the Vitreous Transition

The vitreous transition is characterized by a freezing of atomic degrees of freedom at a temperature T(g) depending on the heating and cooling rates. A kinetic origin is generally attributed to this phenomenon instead of a thermodynamic one which we develop here. Completed homogeneous nucleation law...

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Autor principal: Tournier F., Robert
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5448590/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28879955
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma4050869
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author Tournier F., Robert
author_facet Tournier F., Robert
author_sort Tournier F., Robert
collection PubMed
description The vitreous transition is characterized by a freezing of atomic degrees of freedom at a temperature T(g) depending on the heating and cooling rates. A kinetic origin is generally attributed to this phenomenon instead of a thermodynamic one which we develop here. Completed homogeneous nucleation laws reflecting the energy saving due to Fermi energy equalization of nascent crystals and their melt are used. They are applied to bulk metallic glasses and extended to inorganic glasses and polymers. A transition T*(g) among various T(g) corresponds to a crystal homogeneous nucleation temperature, leading to a preliminary formation of a cluster distribution during the relaxation time preceding the long steady-state nucleation time of crystals in small samples. The thermally-activated energy barrier ΔG*(2ls)/k(B)T at T*(g) for homogeneous nucleation is nearly the same in all glass-forming melts and determined by similar values of viscosity and a thermally-activated diffusion barrier from melt to cluster. The glass transition T*(g) is a material constant and a linear function of the energy saving associated with charge transfers from nascent clusters to the melt. The vitreous transition and the melting temperatures alone are used to predict the free-volume disappearance temperature equal to the Vogel-Fulcher-Tammann temperature of fragile glass-forming melts, in agreement with many viscosity measurements. The reversible thermodynamic vitreous transition is determined by the disappearance temperature T*(g) of the fully-relaxed enthalpy H(r) that is not time dependent; the observed specific heat jump at T*(g) is equal to the proportionality coefficient of H(r) with (T*(g) − T(a)) for T ≤ T*(g) as expected from the enthalpy excess stored by a quenched undercooled melt at the annealing temperature T(a) and relaxed towards an equilibrium vitreous state. However, the heat flux measurements found in literature over the last 50 years only gave an out-of-equilibrium T(g) since the enthalpy is continuous at T*(g) without visible heat jump.
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spelling pubmed-54485902017-07-28 Thermodynamic Origin of the Vitreous Transition Tournier F., Robert Materials (Basel) Article The vitreous transition is characterized by a freezing of atomic degrees of freedom at a temperature T(g) depending on the heating and cooling rates. A kinetic origin is generally attributed to this phenomenon instead of a thermodynamic one which we develop here. Completed homogeneous nucleation laws reflecting the energy saving due to Fermi energy equalization of nascent crystals and their melt are used. They are applied to bulk metallic glasses and extended to inorganic glasses and polymers. A transition T*(g) among various T(g) corresponds to a crystal homogeneous nucleation temperature, leading to a preliminary formation of a cluster distribution during the relaxation time preceding the long steady-state nucleation time of crystals in small samples. The thermally-activated energy barrier ΔG*(2ls)/k(B)T at T*(g) for homogeneous nucleation is nearly the same in all glass-forming melts and determined by similar values of viscosity and a thermally-activated diffusion barrier from melt to cluster. The glass transition T*(g) is a material constant and a linear function of the energy saving associated with charge transfers from nascent clusters to the melt. The vitreous transition and the melting temperatures alone are used to predict the free-volume disappearance temperature equal to the Vogel-Fulcher-Tammann temperature of fragile glass-forming melts, in agreement with many viscosity measurements. The reversible thermodynamic vitreous transition is determined by the disappearance temperature T*(g) of the fully-relaxed enthalpy H(r) that is not time dependent; the observed specific heat jump at T*(g) is equal to the proportionality coefficient of H(r) with (T*(g) − T(a)) for T ≤ T*(g) as expected from the enthalpy excess stored by a quenched undercooled melt at the annealing temperature T(a) and relaxed towards an equilibrium vitreous state. However, the heat flux measurements found in literature over the last 50 years only gave an out-of-equilibrium T(g) since the enthalpy is continuous at T*(g) without visible heat jump. MDPI 2011-05-09 /pmc/articles/PMC5448590/ /pubmed/28879955 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma4050869 Text en © 2011 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Tournier F., Robert
Thermodynamic Origin of the Vitreous Transition
title Thermodynamic Origin of the Vitreous Transition
title_full Thermodynamic Origin of the Vitreous Transition
title_fullStr Thermodynamic Origin of the Vitreous Transition
title_full_unstemmed Thermodynamic Origin of the Vitreous Transition
title_short Thermodynamic Origin of the Vitreous Transition
title_sort thermodynamic origin of the vitreous transition
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5448590/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28879955
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma4050869
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