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

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


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measurements made on B2O3 (Figure 12a) where three different temperature intervals are distinguished [34]. Above about 270 °C, the liquid phase is in internal thermodynamic equilibrium because its heat capacity is uniquely defined by temperature (and pressure). In the 270–100 °C interval, internal equilibrium is lost as Cp is no longer defined by temperature only. The measurements made upon heating and cooling differ and Cp differences of up to 20% are found between samples initially cooled rapidly and slowly. Also noteworthy is the fact that the observed Cp hysteresis prevents a reversible thermodynamic pathway from being followed. It points instead to the creation of entropy through cycling in this interval and, therefore, demonstrates the irreversibility of the glass–liquid transformation.

Graphs depict the irreversibility of the glass transition: heat capacity hysteresis measured for boron oxide upon cooling and upon heating of a slowly and rapidly cooled glass. (b) Enthalpy and Cp differences between glasses cooled at different rates q; Sup. liq.: enthalpy of the equilibrium supercooled liquid.

      In more detail, the Cp hysteresis results from the observed contrast between a smooth decrease upon cooling and sharp increases upon heating followed by overshoots right at the end of the transition (Figure 12a). The former decrease simply points to the progressive loss of atomic mobility with decreasing temperatures. Upon heating, the situation is more complicated because relaxation resumes at the temperature at which it vanished on cooling, but its first effect is to lower the enthalpy of the glass to bring it closer to the equilibrium values of the supercooled liquid (Figure 12b). At higher temperatures, the enthalpy curve of the material has already crossed that of the supercooled liquid when relaxation becomes almost complete at the timescale of the experiment. The heat capacity then increases rapidly (Figure 12b) in a way that depends on thermal history. The rise is highest for samples initially cooled down at the slowest rates, whose enthalpy is initially the lowest, or for samples heated at the highest rates. If the heating and cooling rates are increased, the transition shifts to higher temperatures because the decrease of the experimental timescale must be matched by an analogous decrease of the relaxation time (Figure 12b).

      Determination of a glass‐transition temperature is more complicated in calorimetry than in dilatometry because of the complex shapes of the observed Cp variations or even of the endothermic peaks recorded in thermal analysis. This temperature may, for instance, be taken as the inflection point of the Cp increase upon heating, but it can alternatively be defined in different ways so that is generally needed to specify which particular one has been selected [35].

      2.3.5 The Case of Plastic Crystals

Graph depicts the calorimetric signature of orientational disorder in cyclohexanol plastic crystal. Measurements made upon heating with a gap from slightly above the glass-transition temperature Tg and the melting temperature Tf because of rapid transformation into the stable, ordered polymorph.

      Source: Data from [36].

      2.3.6 Maxwell Model

      In view of the continuous pathway between the liquid and glass states, glass‐forming liquids cannot be purely Newtonian when they approach the glass transition. In fact, they are viscoelastic, with an elastic component that becomes increasingly important near Tg. More precisely, application of a shear stress first causes an elastic strain, which would be recovered if the stress were released, and then a viscous deformation. The response of a viscous melt subjected to stress thus is made up of an instantaneous, elastic response along with a delayed response. By combining the simplest representations of elasticity and viscous flow, Maxwell model has as a mechanical analogue a spring and a dash pot placed in series [37]. Its important result is that, if stresses are applied at low frequencies, as usually the case in viscometry, then a simple relationship holds between the viscosity, relaxation time, and shear modulus at infinite frequency (G),


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