Generalized Vogel law for glass-forming liquids

A model for non-Arrhenius structural and dielectric relaxation in glass-forming materials is based on defect clustering in supercooled liquids. Relaxation in the cold liquid is highly hindered, and assumed to require the presence of a mobile defect to loosen the structure near it. A mild distributio...

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Veröffentlicht in:J. Stat. Phys.; (United States) 1988-10, Vol.53 (1-2), p.531-541
Hauptverfasser: BENDLER, J. T, SHLESINGER, M. F
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A model for non-Arrhenius structural and dielectric relaxation in glass-forming materials is based on defect clustering in supercooled liquids. Relaxation in the cold liquid is highly hindered, and assumed to require the presence of a mobile defect to loosen the structure near it. A mild distribution of free-energy barriers impeding defect hopping can generate a wide distribution of waiting times between relaxation events. When the mean waiting time is longer than the time of an experiment, no characteristic time scale exists. This case directly yields the Kohlrausch-Williams-Watts relaxation law. A free-energy mismatch between defect and nondefect regions produces a defect-defect attraction, which can lead to aggregation. This may occur in defect-rich fragile liquids which also exhibit Vogel kinetics. Defect aggregation and correlation in the high-temperature region above the critical consolute temperature T/sub c/ is described using the Ornstein-Zernike theory of critical fluctuations. In the mean-field limit this provides as good an account of dielectric and structural relaxation in glycerol, n-propanol, and i-butyl bromide as does the original Vogel law, and for the mixed salt KNO/sub 3/-Ca(NO/sub 3/)/sub 2/ and B/sub 2/O/sub 3/ it also describes kinetics over their entire temperature ranges. A breakdown of the Vogel law in the immediate vicinity of T/sub g/ is avoided, and the need to invoke extra low-temperature mechanisms to explain an apparent return to Arrhenius behavior is removed.
ISSN:0022-4715
1572-9613
DOI:10.1007/BF01011571