Issue 27, 2016

Inherent structure energy is a good indicator of molecular mobility in glasses

Abstract

Glasses produced via physical vapor deposition can display greater kinetic stability and lower enthalpy than glasses prepared by liquid cooling. While the reduced enthalpy has often been used as a measure of the stability, it is not obvious whether dynamic measures of stability provide the same view. Here, we study dynamics in vapor-deposited and liquid-cooled glass films using molecular simulations of a bead-spring polymer model as well as a Lennard-Jones binary mixture in two and three dimensions. We confirm that the dynamics in vapor-deposited glasses is indeed slower than in ordinary glasses. We further show that the inherent structure energy is a good reporter of local dynamics, and that aged systems and glasses prepared by cooling at progressively slower rates exhibit the same behavior as vapor-deposited materials when they both have the same inherent structure energy. These findings suggest that the stability inferred from measurements of the energy is also manifested in dynamic observables, and they strengthen the view that vapor deposition processes provide an effective strategy for creation of stable glasses.

Graphical abstract: Inherent structure energy is a good indicator of molecular mobility in glasses

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
04 Apr 2016
Accepted
31 May 2016
First published
31 May 2016

Soft Matter, 2016,12, 5898-5904

Author version available

Inherent structure energy is a good indicator of molecular mobility in glasses

J. Helfferich, I. Lyubimov, D. Reid and J. J. de Pablo, Soft Matter, 2016, 12, 5898 DOI: 10.1039/C6SM00810K

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