The Shear Modulus of Glassy and Supercooled Liquid Pd40Ni40P20

1998 ◽  
Vol 554 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. S. Bains ◽  
C. A. Gordon ◽  
A. V. Granato ◽  
R. B. Schwarz

AbstractWe have measured the shear modulus and its temperature dependence of Pd40Ni40P20 using an EMAT technique. The room temperature value of 3.92(1011) d/cm2 is in fair agreement with that of 3.66(1011) d/cm2 given earlier by He and Schwarz, using a resonant ultrasound spectroscopy technique. The relative change with temperature coefficient for T << Tg is 3.4(10−4) K−1. For the heating rate of ∼1 K/min used here, Tg = 565 K compared with a value of 575 K reported earlier. The shear modulus is continuous at Tg , but its temperature coefficient is larger by a factor of 6.5 for T >> Tg. During temperature cycling near but below Tg , irreversible aging effects are found showing that the amorphous state is not an equilibrium state. Near but above Tg, the cycling effects are reversible for time scales of the order of hours but not for time scales of the order of days, showing that metastable equilibrium states have not yet been fully attained. The results are in overall agreement with the predictions of the Interstitialcy Theory.

2009 ◽  
Vol 23 (06n07) ◽  
pp. 1294-1299 ◽  
Author(s):  
YONGLI CHEN ◽  
AIMIN WANG ◽  
HAIFENG ZHANG ◽  
ZHUANGQI HU

A new kind of composite with a bi -continuous structure was produced by pressure infiltrating melt Zr 41.2 Ti 13.8 Cu 12.5 Ni 10 Be 22.5 into porous SiC which was made by powder metallurgy. Microstructure investigations of the composite show that the melt alloy was fully infiltrated into the voids of porous SiC and quenched into amorphous state. Both the amorphous alloy and the porous SiC exhibit a three-dimensional interconnected net structure. The study of thermal properties reveals that the addition of porous SiC reduces the width of supercooled liquid region of the composite. The bi -continuous composite presents 2% plastic strain and ultimate strength of 1250MPa.


2000 ◽  
Vol 644 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alijeet S. Bains ◽  
Craig A. Gordon ◽  
Andrew V. Granato ◽  
Alexander B. Lebedev ◽  
Marissa A. LaMadrid ◽  
...  

AbstractUsing a non-contact electromagnetic-acoustic transformation (EMAT) technique, we have measured the temperature dependence of the infinite frequency shear modulus of Vit 1 at constant heating rate in the glassy and supercooled liquid states. Values of the shear softening fragility parameter -dln(G/Gg/d(T/Tg) are compared with those obtainable from specific heat and viscosity measurements, using the interstitialcy theory of condensed matter states. There is overall agreement found between these independently measured values.


Entropy ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (10) ◽  
pp. 1098 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jürn W. P. Schmelzer ◽  
Timur V. Tropin ◽  
Vladimir M. Fokin ◽  
Alexander S. Abyzov ◽  
Edgar D. Zanotto

In the application of classical nucleation theory (CNT) and all other theoretical models of crystallization of liquids and glasses it is always assumed that nucleation proceeds only after the supercooled liquid or the glass have completed structural relaxation processes towards the metastable equilibrium state. Only employing such an assumption, the thermodynamic driving force of crystallization and the surface tension can be determined in the way it is commonly performed. The present paper is devoted to the theoretical treatment of a different situation, when nucleation proceeds concomitantly with structural relaxation. To treat the nucleation kinetics theoretically for such cases, we need adequate expressions for the thermodynamic driving force and the surface tension accounting for the contributions caused by the deviation of the supercooled liquid from metastable equilibrium. In the present paper, such relations are derived. They are expressed via deviations of structural order parameters from their equilibrium values. Relaxation processes result in changes of the structural order parameters with time. As a consequence, the thermodynamic driving force and surface tension, and basic characteristics of crystal nucleation, such as the work of critical cluster formation and the steady-state nucleation rate, also become time-dependent. We show that this scenario may be realized in the vicinity and below the glass transition temperature, and it may occur only if diffusion (controlling nucleation) and viscosity (controlling the alpha-relaxation process) in the liquid decouple. Analytical estimates are illustrated and confirmed by numerical computations for a model system. The theory is successfully applied to the interpretation of experimental data. Several further consequences of this newly developed theoretical treatment are discussed in detail. In line with our previous investigations, we reconfirm that only when the characteristic times of structural relaxation are of similar order of magnitude or longer than the characteristic times of crystal nucleation, elastic stresses evolving in nucleation may significantly affect this process. Advancing the methods of theoretical analysis of elastic stress effects on nucleation, for the first time expressions are derived for the dependence of the surface tension of critical crystallites on elastic stresses. As the result, a comprehensive theoretical description of crystal nucleation accounting appropriately for the effects of deviations of the liquid from the metastable states and of relaxation on crystal nucleation of glass-forming liquids, including the effect of simultaneous stress evolution and stress relaxation on nucleation, is now available. As one of its applications, this theoretical treatment provides a new tool for the explanation of the low-temperature anomaly in nucleation in silicate and polymer glasses (the so-called “breakdown” of CNT at temperatures below the temperature of the maximum steady-state nucleation rate). We show that this anomaly results from much more complex features of crystal nucleation in glasses caused by deviations from metastable equilibrium (resulting in changes of the thermodynamic driving force, the surface tension, and the work of critical cluster formation, in the necessity to account of structural relaxation and stress effects) than assumed so far. If these effects are properly accounted for, then CNT appropriately describes both the initial, the intermediate, and the final states of crystal nucleation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 324 ◽  
pp. 139-144
Author(s):  
Sonya Redjala ◽  
Said Azem ◽  
Nourredine Ait Hocine

The polycarbonate (PC) is a highly valued polymeric material for its various characteristics and low cost. Its transparency and impact resistance justify its use in a severe radiation and temperature environment. The aim of this article is to subject this material to aging under ultraviolet (UV) radiation with a wavelength of 253 nm and a temperature of 80°C for various times. The physicochemical and mechanical characterizations of the virgin and aged material have allowed the revelation of the aging effects on the properties. The Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR) technique highlight breaks in chemical bonds in the molecular chains of the PC subjected to the combined effects of UV and heat. X-ray analysis have showed a reduction in crystallites and a tendency towards an amorphous state at short times, but the degree of crystallinity increases again at long exposure times of the material. As a result, the microhardness of the aged material is strongly affected on the exposed surface with less effect depending on the depth.


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