42 research outputs found
The relationship between fragility, configurational entropy and the potential energy landscape of glass forming liquids
Glass is a microscopically disordered, solid form of matter that results when
a fluid is cooled or compressed in such a fashion that it does not crystallise.
Almost all types of materials are capable of glass formation -- polymers, metal
alloys, and molten salts, to name a few. Given such diversity, organising
principles which systematise data concerning glass formation are invaluable.
One such principle is the classification of glass formers according to their
fragility\cite{fragility}. Fragility measures the rapidity with which a
liquid's properties such as viscosity change as the glassy state is approached.
Although the relationship between features of the energy landscape of a glass
former, its configurational entropy and fragility have been analysed previously
(e. g.,\cite{speedyfr}), an understanding of the origins of fragility in these
features is far from being well established. Results for a model liquid, whose
fragility depends on its bulk density, are presented in this letter. Analysis
of the relationship between fragility and quantitative measures of the energy
landscape (the complicated dependence of energy on configuration) reveal that
the fragility depends on changes in the vibrational properties of individual
energy basins, in addition to the total number of such basins present, and
their spread in energy. A thermodynamic expression for fragility is derived,
which is in quantitative agreement with {\it kinetic} fragilities obtained from
the liquid's diffusivity.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
Dielectric and thermal relaxation in the energy landscape
We derive an energy landscape interpretation of dielectric relaxation times
in undercooled liquids, comparing it to the traditional Debye and
Gemant-DiMarzio-Bishop pictures. The interaction between different local
structural rearrangements in the energy landscape explains qualitatively the
recently observed splitting of the flow process into an initial and a final
stage. The initial mechanical relaxation stage is attributed to hopping
processes, the final thermal or structural relaxation stage to the decay of the
local double-well potentials. The energy landscape concept provides an
explanation for the equality of thermal and dielectric relaxation times. The
equality itself is once more demonstrated on the basis of literature data for
salol.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, 41 references, Workshop Disordered Systems,
Molveno 2006, submitted to Philosophical Magazin
The Shapes of Cooperatively Rearranging Regions in Glass Forming Liquids
The shapes of cooperatively rearranging regions in glassy liquids change from
being compact at low temperatures to fractal or ``stringy'' as the dynamical
crossover temperature from activated to collisional transport is approached
from below. We present a quantitative microscopic treatment of this change of
morphology within the framework of the random first order transition theory of
glasses. We predict a correlation of the ratio of the dynamical crossover
temperature to the laboratory glass transition temperature, and the heat
capacity discontinuity at the glass transition, Delta C_p. The predicted
correlation agrees with experimental results for the 21 materials compiled by
Novikov and Sokolov.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Anatomical and physiological evidence for polarisation vision in the nocturnal bee Megalopta genalis
Direct observation of Cr magnetic order in CoCrTa and CoCrPt thin films
Magnetic circular dichroism measurements of room temperature, sputter deposited Co86Cr12Ta2 and CoS6Cr12Pt2 films were performed to investigate the local magnetic ordering of the Co and Cr atoms. The results demonstrate that the Cr has a net magnetic moment and that a small fraction of the Cr is magnetically oriented opposite to the Co moment. (C) 1997 American Institute of Physics.open115sciescopu