Title of article
The liquid–glass transition – is it a fourth order phase transition?
Author/Authors
Dimitrov، نويسنده , , V.I.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
9
From page
2394
To page
2402
Abstract
The liquid–glass transition is analyzed using a theory of Brownian motion in liquids recently developed by the author. It is shown that if a liquid could be cooled in quasi-static process and still avoids crystallization it would transform into a stable non-crystalline solid, which would be a normal thermodynamic phase. This hypothetical phase transition is neither first nor second order. At equilibrium transition temperature the free energy of the system and its first, second and third derivatives are all continuous functions, but its fourth derivative with respect to temperature is discontinuous. Therefore, the equilibrium liquid to non-crystalline solid transition may be considered a fourth order phase transition. The temperature of this phase transition, TK, which coincides approximately with the Kauzmann temperature, is below the standard glass transition temperature Tg. (When the temperature decreases below Tg, the viscosity increases above 1013 dPa s.) When the temperature decreases below TK, the system becomes an ideal solid because the molecular mobility becomes zero and the viscosity becomes infinite if we neglect vacancy-like mechanisms of mobility. This hypothetical quasi-static transition is physically unobservable because the real liquid–glass transition must be done at a cooling rate high enough to suppress the growth of nanocrystals, which makes the liquid–glass transformation a non-equilibrium complicated phenomenon. Understanding this ideal phase transition is a first step towards describing the real liquid–glass transition from first principles.
Journal title
Journal of Non-Crystalline Solids
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Journal of Non-Crystalline Solids
Record number
1370460
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