Pazmiño Betancourt BA, Hanakata PZ, Starr FW, Douglas JF. Quantitative relations between cooperative motion, emergent elasticity, and free volume in model glass-forming polymer materials.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2015;
112:2966-71. [PMID:
25713371 PMCID:
PMC4364219 DOI:
10.1073/pnas.1418654112]
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Abstract
The study of glass formation is largely framed by semiempirical models that emphasize the importance of progressively growing cooperative motion accompanying the drop in fluid configurational entropy, emergent elasticity, or the vanishing of accessible free volume available for molecular motion in cooled liquids. We investigate the extent to which these descriptions are related through computations on a model coarse-grained polymer melt, with and without nanoparticle additives, and for supported polymer films with smooth or rough surfaces, allowing for substantial variation of the glass transition temperature and the fragility of glass formation. We find quantitative relations between emergent elasticity, the average local volume accessible for particle motion, and the growth of collective motion in cooled liquids. Surprisingly, we find that each of these models of glass formation can equally well describe the relaxation data for all of the systems that we simulate. In this way, we uncover some unity in our understanding of glass-forming materials from perspectives formerly considered as distinct.
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