Search results for "Glass"
showing 10 items of 1153 documents
X-ray-diffraction study of the crystal structures and orientational glass state ofAr1−x(N2)xsolid solutions
1990
Solid solutions of ${\mathrm{Ar}}_{1\mathrm{\ensuremath{-}}\mathit{x}}$(${\mathrm{N}}_{2}$${)}_{\mathit{x}}$ have been investigated by x-ray powder diffraction in the range 0.5x1.0, 8T60 K, and under hydrostatic pressures up to 2200 bars. The structural hcp-cubic (Pa3) phase transition is identified as a martensitic transformation with a wide transformation hysteresis. For x0.8 and T30 K the solid solutions show the orientational glass state, which is characterized by a superposition of inhomogeneous and homogeneous lattice strains. The inhomogeneous component is described by the random-field model. The homogeneous component corresponds to an orthorhombic distortion of the hcp lattice. Two …
Quantum signatures in the dynamics of two dipole-dipole interacting soft dimers
2006
The quantum covariances of physically transparent pairs of observables relative to two dimers hosted in a solid matrix are exactly investigated in the temporal domain. Both dimers possess fermionic and bosonic degrees of freedom and are dipolarly coupled. We find out and describe clear signatures traceable back to the presence and persistence of quantum coherence in the time evolution of the system. Manifestations of a competition between intramolecular and intermolecular energy migration mechanisms are brought to light. The experimental relevance of our results is briefly commented.
Mode coupling approach to the ideal glass transition of molecular liquids: Linear molecules
1997
The mode coupling theory (MCT) for the ideal liquid glass transition, which was worked out for simple liquids mainly by Gotze, Sjogren, and their co-workers, is extended to a molecular liquid of linear and rigid molecules. By use of the projection formalism of Zwanzig and Mori an equation of motion is derived for the correlators S[sub lm,l[sup (prime)]m[sup (prime)]]([bold q],t) of the tensorial one-particle density rho [sub lm]([bold q],t), which contains the orientational degrees of freedom for l(greater-than)0. Application of the mode coupling approximation to the memory kernel results into a closed set of equations for S[sub lm,l[sup (prime)]m[sup (prime)]]([bold q],t), which requires t…
Three-step decay of time correlations at polymer-solid interfaces
2012
Two-step decay of relaxation functions, i.e., time scale separation between microscopic dynamics and structural relaxation, is the defining signature of the structural glass transition. We show that for glass-forming polymer melts at an attractive surface slow desorption kinetics introduces an additional time scale separation among the relaxational degrees of freedom leading to a three-step decay. The inherent length scale of this process is the radius of gyration in contrast to the segmental scale governing the glass transition. We show how the three-step decay can be observed in incoherent scattering experiments and discuss its relevance for the glass transition of confined polymers by an…
Theory of glass transition in spin glasses, orientational glasses and structural glasses
2008
Theoretical concepts about the glass transition are briefly reviewed, and the test of these ideas by Monte Carlo simulations of simple lattice models is described, with an emphasis on isotropic and anisotropic orientational glasses, and the bond fluctuation model of polymer melts. It is suggested that orientational glasses do have an equilibrium phase transition at zero temperature (in d = 3 dimensions!) only, in contrast to the Ising spin glass which orders at nonzero temperature. A diverging glass correlation length is identified that is responsible for the anomalous slowing down. For the Potts glass, the divergence seems to be exponential, implying that the model is at its lower critical…
Small-Angle Excess Scattering: Glassy Freezing or Local Orientational Ordering?
1996
We present Monte Carlo simulations of a dense polymer melt which shows glass-transition-like slowing-down upon cooling, as well as a build up of nematic order. At small wave vectors q this model system shows excess scattering similar to that recently reported for light-scattering experiments on some polymeric and molecular glass-forming liquids. For our model system we can provide clear evidence that this excess scattering is due to the onset of short-range nematic order and not directly related to the glass transition.
Anisotropic motion of toluene above and below the glass transition studied by 2H NMR
1995
Abstract 2 H nuclear magnetic resonance spin-lattice relaxation experiments on two selectively deuterated toluene molecules have been performed over a wide temperature range, spanning liquid and glassy states, to examine anisotropic molecular dynamics. In the liquid regime, the relaxation data are analyzed by the model of anisotropic rotational diffusion. A more phenomenological ansatz is used for the whole temperature regime to obtain information about anisotropic reorientation and its temperature dependence. We find that the anisotropy is reduced in the supercooled state and the motion becomes approximately isotropic below 140 K which is interpreted as the onset of cooperative reorientati…
Intramolecular caging in polybutadiene due to rotational barriers
2003
We present molecular dynamics simulations of a chemically realistic model of 1,4-polybutadiene and a freely rotating chain model derived from the first model by neglecting all dihedral potentials. We show that the presence of energy barriers hindering dihedral rotation leads to an intermediate plateau regime in the tagged particle mean-squared displacement reminiscent of the cage effect underlying the mode-coupling description of the liquid-glass transition. This intramolecular caging, however, occurs already at temperatures well above the glass transition regime. Because of its different physical origin, it also does not comply with the theoretical predictions of the mode-coupling theory. …
Anomalous diffusion of polymers in supercooled melts near the glass transition
2007
Two coarse-grained models for polymer chains in dense melts near the glass transition are investigated: the bond fluctuation lattice model, where long bonds are energetically favored, is studied by dynamic Monte Carlo simulation, and an off-lattice bead-spring model with Lennard-Jones forces between the beads is treated by Molecular Dynamics. We compare the time-dependence of the mean square displacements of both models, and show that they become very similar on mesoscopic scales (i.e., displacements larger than a bond length). The slowing down of motions near the glass transition is discussed in terms of the mode coupling theory and other concepts.
Simulation of Models for Isotropic and Anisotropic Orientational Glasses
1992
“Orientational glass” behavior is found when molecular crystals are randomly diluted, and quadrupole moments get frozen by random alignment of the molecules, similar to “spin glass” behavior of randomly diluted magnets. Monte Carlo simulation of lattice models where quadrupole moments interact with nearest neighbor Gaussian coupling is a unique tool to study this behavior. The time-dependent glass order parameter exhibits anomalously slow relaxation, compatible with the Kohlrausch-Williams-Watts (KWW) stretched exponential function. Both isotropic and anisotropic models exhibit in d=2 and d=3 spatial dimensions glass transitions at zero temperature only. While the glass correlation length a…