Abstract
It has long been appreciated that both temperature and density play roles in determining the extremely super-Arrhenius, low-temperature behavior of the viscosity and long α-relaxation times that characterize fragile supercooled liquids. But what has not been generally appreciated, and what we believe we have established (by focusing on a model-free analysis in terms of temperature and density, rather than upon temperature and pressure) is that over the range of densities and temperatures spanned by the experiments carried out at 1 atm pressure, temperature is the dominant control variable. This information is essential input to the formulation of a theory or model of the long-time dynamics of low-temperature fragile liquids, and it suggests a focus on activated dynamics rather than on free volume. This work indicates that, except possibly at very high densities (very high pressures), the glass transition is not a result of congestion due to a lack of free volume. © 1998 American Institute of Physics.
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CITATION STYLE
Ferrer, M. L., Lawrence, C., Demirjian, B. G., Kivelson, D., Alba-Simionesco, C., & Tarjus, G. (1998). Supercooled liquids and the glass transition: Temperature as the control variable. Journal of Chemical Physics, 109(18), 8010–8015. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.477448
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