12 research outputs found
A test of non-equilibrium thermodynamics in glassy systems: the soft-sphere case
The scaling properties of the soft-sphere potential allow the derivation of
an exact expression for the pressure of a frozen liquid, i.e., the pressure
corresponding to configurations which are local minima in its multidimensional
potential energy landscape. The existence of such a relation offers the unique
possibility for testing the recently proposed extension of the liquid free
energy to glassy out-of-equilibrium conditions and the associated expression
for the temperature of the configurational degrees of freedom. We demonstrate
that the non-equilibrium free energy provides an exact description of the
soft-sphere pressure in glass states
Dynamical Mean Field Theory for Self-Generated Quantum Glasses
We present a many body approach for non-equilibrium behavior and
self-generated glassiness in strongly correlated quantum systems. It combines
the dynamical mean field theory of equilibrium systems with the replica theory
for classical glasses without quenched disorder. We apply this approach to
study a quantized version of the Brazovskii model and find a self-generated
quantum glass that remains in a quantum mechanically mixed state as T -> 0.
This quantum glass is formed by a large number of competing states spread over
an energy region which is determined within our theory.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Glass transition under confinement-what can be learned from calorimetry
Calorimetry is an effective analytical tool to characterize the glass transition and phase transitions under confinement. Calorimetry offers a broad dynamic range regarding heating and cooling rates, including isothermal and temperature modulated operation. Today 12 orders of magnitude in scanning rate can be covered by combining different types of calorimeters. The broad dynamic range, comparable to dielectric spectroscopy, is especially of interest for the study of kinetically controlled processes like crystallization or glass transition.
Accuracy of calorimetric measurements is not very high. Commonly it does not reach 0.1% and often accuracy is only a few percent. Nevertheless, calorimetry can reach high sensitivity and reproducibility. Both are of particular interest for the study of confined systems. Low addenda heat capacity chip calorimeters are capable to measure the step in heat capacity at the glass transition in nanometer thin films. The good reproducibility is used for the study of glass forming materials confined by nanometer sized structures, like porous glasses, semicrystalline structures, nanocomposites, phase separated block copolymers, etc. Calorimetry allows also for the frequency dependent measurement of complex heat capacity in a frequency range covering several orders of magnitude.
Here I exclusively consider calorimetry and its application to glass transition in confined materials. In most cases calorimetry reveals only a weak dependence of the glass transition temperature on confinement as long as the confining dimensions are above 10 nm. Why these findings contradict many other studies applying other techniques to similar systems is still an unsolved problem of glass transition in confinement