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1.
J Chem Phys ; 157(7): 071101, 2022 Aug 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35987598

ABSTRACT

The kinetics of the first order liquid-liquid transition (LLT) in a single-component liquid D-mannitol have been examined in detail by the high rate of flash differential scanning calorimetry measurements. By controlling the annealing temperature, the phase X formation from the supercooled liquid is distinguished by either a nucleation-growth or a spinodal-decomposition type of LLT. In the measured time-temperature-transformation curve the portion covering the nucleation-growth type of LLT can be well fitted with a classical nucleation theory analysis.


Subject(s)
Mannitol , Calorimetry, Differential Scanning , Kinetics , Mannitol/chemistry , Temperature
2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 128(7): 075501, 2022 Feb 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35244425

ABSTRACT

Surface diffusion is vastly faster than bulk diffusion in some glasses, but only moderately enhanced in others. We show that this variation is closely linked to bulk fragility, a common measure of how quickly dynamics is excited when a glass is heated to become a liquid. In fragile molecular glasses, surface diffusion can be a factor of 10^{8} faster than bulk diffusion at the glass transition temperature, while in the strong system SiO_{2}, the enhancement is a factor of 10. Between these two extremes lie systems of intermediate fragility, including metallic glasses and amorphous selenium and silicon. This indicates that stronger liquids have greater resistance to dynamic excitation from bulk to surface and enables prediction of surface diffusion, surface crystallization, and formation of stable glasses by vapor deposition.

3.
Sci Bull (Beijing) ; 66(13): 1312-1318, 2021 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36654153

ABSTRACT

Determination and conceptualization of atomic structures of metallic glasses or amorphous alloys remain a grand challenge. Structural models proposed for bulk metallic glasses are still controversial owing to experimental difficulties in directly imaging the atom positions in three-dimensional structures. With the advanced atomic-resolution imaging, here we directly observed the atomic arrangements in atomically thin metallic glassy membranes obtained by vapor deposition. The atomic packing in the amorphous membrane is shown to have a fractal characteristic, with the fractal dimension depending on the atomic density. Locally, the atomic configuration for the metallic glass membrane is composed of many types of polygons with the bonding angles concentrated on 45°-55°. The fractal atomic structure is consistent with the analysis by the percolation theory, and may account for the enhanced relaxation dynamics and the easiness of glass transition as reported for the thin metallic glassy films or glassy surface.

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