Encyclopedia of Glass Science, Technology, History, and Culture. Группа авторов

Encyclopedia of Glass Science, Technology, History, and Culture - Группа авторов


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Affinity A (intensive, J/mol) A = 0 and dA = 0 True equilibrium; liquid state; σi = 0 Unphysical A = 0 and dA ≠ 0 Isomassic state; σi = 0 False equilibrium; nonequilibrium state; σi = 0 A ≠ 0 and dA = 0 Isomassic, isoaffine state; σi = 0 Isoaffine state; σi ≠ 0 A ≠ 0 and dA ≠ 0 Nonequilibrium; glassy state; σi = 0 Nonequilibrium; viscous state; σi ≠ 0

      Liquid, glass, and relaxing liquid states are indicated by gray cells. The other cells indicate particular states that can be encountered or not during the glass transition. The value of the rate of production of entropy is indicated in each cell.

      where the thermodynamic force actually is A/T, for the sake of dimensional analysis (the entropy production being in W/K).

      Although the liquid state is generally far from simple, it can be considered as an equilibrium reference at viscosities (η) low enough that flow is easy, i.e. at high‐enough temperatures at the pressure considered. In that case, the diffusion of microscopic entities, be they molecules or atoms, obeys the Stokes‐Einstein relation, which relates the diffusivity D to the temperature and viscosity with:

      (5)equation

      where the coefficient C is a geometrical factor fixed by the boundary condition of the flow.

      From its position at time t0, a diffusing entity travels a kind of random walk over an average distance images as a function of time. For low‐viscosity liquids and high temperatures, D is high so that entities explore a great many different positions and configurations in a time shorter than that needed to perform a physical measurement. They do it through degrees of freedom that include not only thermal motions of translation, rotation, and vibration but also the complex kinds of atomic motions collectively termed configurational, which are governed by strong short‐range repulsions and long‐range attractions in molecular liquids. The measurement then averages out all these configurations.

      Picturing these motions at a microscopic scale is difficult, however, especially for complex liquids or melts with various interacting entities. In various types of glass‐forming liquids [5], local order can nonetheless be described in terms of degree of polymerization, formation of channels or sub‐lattices, or formation of interpenetrating networks. Like the advancement of a chemical reaction, such structural features may be described in terms of the aforementioned parameter ξ. In internal thermodynamic equilibrium, i.e. in the liquid state, ξ is equal to ξeq(T,P), but not in the glass transition range where ξ(t) becomes a function of T(t), P(t), and A(t), revealing its nonequilibrium nature. Below the glass transition range, where the relaxation time of the configurational degrees of freedom exceeds the experimental timescale, they cease to contribute to the measured property. At temperature low enough, the structure then eventually freezes in for good in one state defined by one particular value of ξ(t), which becomes independent of the external parameters T and P.

      This type of definition also applies to other thermodynamic variables such as the thermal expansion coefficient αP, or the isothermal compressibility κT. A configurational contribution consequently represents the thermodynamic contribution that originates in configurational changes in the liquid.

      The glassy state then is defined as that for which the configurational movements have been frozen‐in, i.e. images. In this state, only the vibrational motions, i.e. the fast degrees of freedom (faster than the experimental timescale), contribute. To define this contribution over the entire temperature interval of interest, an extrapolation of the glass heat capacity from low to high temperatures is needed (Figure 2). The heat capacity of the supercooled liquid can also be extrapolated toward low temperatures (Figure


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