Floppy mode degeneracy and decoupling of constraint predictions in supercooled borate and silicate liquids

The theory of temperature-dependent topological constraints has been used to successfully explain the compositional dependence of glass properties for oxide and non-oxide compositions. It relates the number of topological degrees of freedom with the glass transition temperature through the configura...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bruno ePoletto Rodrigues, Lothar eWondraczek
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-01-01
Series:Frontiers in Materials
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmats.2014.00032/full
Description
Summary:The theory of temperature-dependent topological constraints has been used to successfully explain the compositional dependence of glass properties for oxide and non-oxide compositions. It relates the number of topological degrees of freedom with the glass transition temperature through the configurational entropy of the system. Based on this, we estimated the number of degrees of freedom directly from viscosity measurements of binary alkali borate and silicate glasses. Both approaches exhibit a strong decoupling, which we suggest can be traced to the presence of medium- and long-range constraints that are not taken into account by bond constraint counting. The observed variation of the energy barrier for structural rearrangement and floppy mode degeneracy also corroborate our interpretation. We provide evidence that the degeneracy of floppy modes changes with chemical composition and that the parameter K(x) of the MYEGA viscosity equation could be used to assess changes in the medium-range order.
ISSN:2296-8016