Spatial Heterogeneities in Structural Temperature Cause Kovacs' Expansion Gap Paradox in Aging of Glasses
Research output: Journal Publications and Reviews (RGC: 21, 22, 62) › 21_Publication in refereed journal › peer-review
Author(s)
Detail(s)
Original language | English |
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Article number | 095501 |
Journal / Publication | Physical Review Letters |
Volume | 124 |
Issue number | 9 |
Online published | 6 Mar 2020 |
Publication status | Published - 6 Mar 2020 |
Externally published | Yes |
Link(s)
Abstract
Volume and enthalpy relaxation of glasses after a sudden temperature change has been extensively studied since Kovacs' seminal work. One observes an asymmetric approach to equilibrium upon cooling versus heating and, more counterintuitively, the expansion gap paradox, i.e., a dependence on the initial temperature of the effective relaxation time even close to equilibrium when heating. Here, we show that a distinguishable-particle lattice model can capture both the asymmetry and the paradox. We quantitatively characterize the energetic states of the particle configurations using a physical realization of the fictive temperature called the structural temperature, which, in the heating case, displays a strong spatial heterogeneity. The system relaxes by nucleation and expansion of warmer mobile domains having attained the final temperature, against cooler immobile domains maintained at the initial temperature. A small population of these cooler regions persists close to equilibrium, thus explaining the paradox.
Citation Format(s)
Spatial Heterogeneities in Structural Temperature Cause Kovacs' Expansion Gap Paradox in Aging of Glasses. / Lulli, Matteo; Lee, Chun-Shing; Deng, Hai-Yao et al.
In: Physical Review Letters, Vol. 124, No. 9, 095501, 06.03.2020.Research output: Journal Publications and Reviews (RGC: 21, 22, 62) › 21_Publication in refereed journal › peer-review