Can a stable glass be superheated? Modelling the kinetic stability of coated glassy films

The fabrication of ultra-stable glass films by vapour deposition and their subsequent front-like response to annealing are both manifestations of the enhancement of dynamics at the amorphous surface. We use the facilitated kinetic Ising model to model the behaviour of ultra-stable amorphous films wh...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Journal of chemical physics Vol. 138; no. 12; p. 12A516
Main Authors Douglass, Ian, Harrowell, Peter
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 28.03.2013
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Summary:The fabrication of ultra-stable glass films by vapour deposition and their subsequent front-like response to annealing are both manifestations of the enhancement of dynamics at the amorphous surface. We use the facilitated kinetic Ising model to model the behaviour of ultra-stable amorphous films when a coating is applied that suppresses the dynamics at the film surface. The consequences of this manipulation of the film include glass films that can be heated to temperatures in excess of the glass transition without transforming into the liquid, the possibility of direct visualization of the spatial distribution of intrinsic dynamic heterogeneities, and the possibility of using surface treatment to engineer relaxation of these glass films.
ISSN:1089-7690
DOI:10.1063/1.4772480