Nonequilibrium viscosity of glass

被引:143
|
作者
Mauro, John C. [1 ]
Allan, Douglas C. [1 ]
Potuzak, Marcel [1 ]
机构
[1] Corning Inc, Div Sci & Technol, Corning, NY 14831 USA
来源
PHYSICAL REVIEW B | 2009年 / 80卷 / 09期
关键词
glass; glass transition; selenium; viscosity; ACTIVATION-RELAXATION-TECHNIQUE; EIGENVECTOR-FOLLOWING TECHNIQUE; SUPERCOOLED LIQUIDS; ENERGY LANDSCAPE; TEMPERATURE-DEPENDENCE; STRUCTURAL RELAXATION; FICTIVE TEMPERATURE; ENTHALPY LANDSCAPES; KAUZMANN PARADOX; FORMING LIQUIDS;
D O I
10.1103/PhysRevB.80.094204
中图分类号
T [工业技术];
学科分类号
08 ;
摘要
Since glass is a nonequilibrium material, its properties depend on both composition and thermal history. While most prior studies have focused on equilibrium liquid viscosity, an accurate description of nonequilibrium viscosity is essential for understanding the low temperature dynamics of glass. Departure from equilibrium occurs as a glass-forming system is cooled through the glass transition range. The glass transition involves a continuous breakdown of ergodicity as the system gradually becomes trapped in a subset of the available configurational phase space. At very low temperatures a glass is perfectly nonergodic (or "isostructural"), and the viscosity is described well by an Arrhenius form. However, the behavior of viscosity during the glass transition range itself is not yet understood. In this paper, we address the problem of glass viscosity using the enthalpy landscape model of Mauro and Loucks [Phys. Rev. B 76, 174202 (2007)] for selenium, an elemental glass former. To study a wide range of thermal histories, we compute nonequilibrium viscosity with cooling rates from 10(-12) to 10(12) K/s. Based on these detailed landscape calculations, we propose a simplified phenomenological model capturing the essential physics of glass viscosity. The phenomenological model incorporates an ergodicity parameter that accounts for the continuous breakdown of ergodicity at the glass transition. We show a direct relationship between the nonequilibrium viscosity parameters and the fragility of the supercooled liquid. The nonequilibrium viscosity model is validated against experimental measurements of Corning EAGLE XG (TM) glass. The measurements are performed using a specially designed beam-bending apparatus capable of accurate nonequilibrium viscosity measurements up to 10(16) Pa s. Using a common set of parameters, the phenomenological model provides an accurate description of EAGLE XG (TM) viscosity over the full range of measured temperatures and fictive temperatures.
引用
收藏
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Shear viscosity calculations through a reverse nonequilibrium method
    Cavalcanti, W. L.
    Chen, X.
    Mueller-Plathe, F.
    PHYSICA STATUS SOLIDI A-APPLICATIONS AND MATERIALS SCIENCE, 2007, 204 (04): : 935 - 939
  • [22] 2ND VISCOSITY IN THERMODYNAMICALLY NONEQUILIBRIUM MEDIA
    MOLEVICH, NE
    ORAEVSKY, AN
    ZHURNAL EKSPERIMENTALNOI I TEORETICHESKOI FIZIKI, 1988, 94 (03): : 128 - 132
  • [23] Excess viscosity and glass transition
    Schnell, M
    Wolf, BA
    POLYMER, 2001, 42 (21) : 8599 - 8605
  • [24] VISCOSITY AND RELATED PROPERTIES IN GLASS
    JONES, GO
    REPORTS ON PROGRESS IN PHYSICS, 1948, 12 : 133 - 162
  • [25] Viscosity of recent container glass
    Robinson, HA
    Peterson, CA
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CERAMIC SOCIETY, 1944, 27 (05) : 129 - 138
  • [26] Glass conditioning by viscosity control
    Roger, U
    Hessenkemper, H
    Roth, P
    GLASTECHNISCHE BERICHTE-GLASS SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 1996, 69 (08): : 242 - 245
  • [27] Surface viscosity and the melting of glass
    Swiler, Daniel R.
    Ceramic Transactions, 2021, 269 : 3 - 17
  • [28] VISCOSITY OF SILICATE GLASS MELTS
    SASEK, L
    SILIKATY, 1977, 21 (04): : 291 - 306
  • [29] Glass conditioning by viscosity control
    Roger, Ulrich
    Hessenkemper, Heiko
    Roth, Peter
    Glass science and technology Frankfurt, 1996, 69 (08): : 242 - 245
  • [30] TRANSFORMATION TEMPERATURE AND VISCOSITY OF GLASS
    PRODHOMME, M
    REVUE INTERNATIONALE DES HAUTES TEMPERATURES ET DES REFRACTAIRES, 1975, 12 (01): : 79 - 83