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Building and breaking bonds by homogenous nucleation in glass-forming melts leading to transitions in three liquid states

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Materials 2021, 14, 2287 Bonds.pdfPublished version10.49 MBAdobe PDFView/Open
Title: Building and breaking bonds by homogenous nucleation in glass-forming melts leading to transitions in three liquid states
Authors: Tournier, RF
Ojovan, MI
Item Type: Journal Article
Abstract: The thermal history of melts leads to three liquid states above the melting temperatures Tm containing clusters—bound colloids with two opposite values of enthalpy +Δεlg × ΔHm and −Δεlg × ΔHm and zero. All colloid bonds disconnect at Tn+ > Tm and give rise in congruent materials, through a first-order transition at TLL = Tn+, forming a homogeneous liquid, containing tiny superatoms, built by short-range order. In non-congruent materials, (Tn+) and (TLL) are separated, Tn+ being the temperature of a second order and TLL the temperature of a first-order phase transition. (Tn+) and (TLL) are predicted from the knowledge of solidus and liquidus temperatures using non-classical homogenous nucleation. The first-order transition at TLL gives rise by cooling to a new liquid state containing colloids. Each colloid is a superatom, melted by homogeneous disintegration of nuclei instead of surface melting, and with a Gibbs free energy equal to that of a liquid droplet containing the same magic atom number. Internal and external bond number of colloids increases at Tn+ or from Tn+ to Tg. These liquid enthalpies reveal the natural presence of colloid–colloid bonding and antibonding in glass-forming melts. The Mpemba effect and its inverse exist in all melts and is due to the presence of these three liquid states.
Issue Date: 1-May-2021
Date of Acceptance: 26-Apr-2021
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/89628
DOI: 10.3390/ma14092287
ISSN: 1996-1944
Publisher: MDPI
Journal / Book Title: Materials
Volume: 14
Issue: 9
Copyright Statement: © 2021 by the authors.Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.This article is an open access articledistributed under the terms andconditions of the Creative CommonsAttribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Keywords: Science & Technology
Physical Sciences
Technology
Chemistry, Physical
Materials Science, Multidisciplinary
Metallurgy & Metallurgical Engineering
Physics, Applied
Physics, Condensed Matter
Chemistry
Materials Science
Physics
liquid&#8211
liquid transitions
glass phase
amorphous
undercooling
superheating
percolation threshold
microheterogeneity
TWINKLING FRACTAL THEORY
PHASE-TRANSITIONS
TEMPERATURE
WATER
CRYSTALLIZATION
SUPERCLUSTERS
DEPENDENCE
VISCOSITY
amorphous
glass phase
liquid–liquid transitions
microheterogeneity
percolation threshold
superheating
undercooling
Science & Technology
Physical Sciences
Technology
Chemistry, Physical
Materials Science, Multidisciplinary
Metallurgy & Metallurgical Engineering
Physics, Applied
Physics, Condensed Matter
Chemistry
Materials Science
Physics
liquid&#8211
liquid transitions
glass phase
amorphous
undercooling
superheating
percolation threshold
microheterogeneity
TWINKLING FRACTAL THEORY
PHASE-TRANSITIONS
TEMPERATURE
WATER
CRYSTALLIZATION
SUPERCLUSTERS
DEPENDENCE
VISCOSITY
03 Chemical Sciences
09 Engineering
Publication Status: Published
Article Number: ARTN 2287
Appears in Collections:Materials



This item is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons