Isobaric volume and enthalpy recovery of glasses. II. A transparent multiparameter theory
- 1 July 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Polymer Science: Polymer Physics Edition
- Vol. 17 (7) , 1097-1162
- https://doi.org/10.1002/pol.1979.180170701
Abstract
A multiordering parameter model for glass‐transition phenomena has been developed on the basis of nonequilibrium thermodynamics. In this treatment the state of the glass is determined by the values of N ordering parameters in addition to T and P; the departure from equilibrium is partitioned among the various ordering parameters, each of which is associated with a unique retardation time. These times are assumed to depend on T, P, and on the instantaneous state of the system characterized by its overall departure from equilibrium, giving rise to the well‐known nonlinear effects observed in volume and enthalpy recovery. The contribution of each ordering parameter to the departure and the associated retardation times define the fundamental distribution function (the structural retardation spectrum) of the system or, equivalently, its fundamental material response function. These, together with a few experimentally measurable material constants, completely define the recovery behavior of the system when subjected to any thermal treatment. The behavior of the model is explored for various classes of thermal histories of increasing complexity, in order to simulate real experimental situations. The relevant calculations are based on a discrete retardation spectrum, extending over four time decades, and on reasonable values of the relevant material constants in order to imitate the behavior of polymer glasses. The model clearly separates the contribution of the retardation spectrum from the temperature‐structure dependence of the retardation times which controls its shifts along the experimental time scale. This is achieved by using the natural time scale of the system which eliminates all the nonlinear effects, thus reducing the response function to the Boltzmann superposition equation, similar to that encountered in the linear viscoelasticity. As a consequence, the system obeys a rate (time) ‐temperature reduction rule which provides for generalization within each class of thermal treatment. Thus the model establishes a rational basis for comparing theory with experiment, and also various kinds of experiments between themselves. The analysis further predicts interesting features, some of which have often been overlooked. Among these are the impossibility of extraction of the spectrum (or response function) from experiments involving cooling from high temperatures at finite rate; and the appearance of two peaks in the expansion coefficient, or heat capacity, during the heating stage of three‐step thermal cycles starting at high temperatures. Finally, the theory also provides a rationale for interpreting the time dependence of mechanical or other structure‐sensitive properties of glasses as well as for predicting their long‐range behavior.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Fünfundzwanzig Jahre Nernstscher WärmesatzPublished by Springer Nature ,2007
- A simple phenomenological approach to the thermal behavior of glasses during uniform heating or coolingJournal of Polymer Science: Polymer Physics Edition, 1976
- Grafted polymers from poly(4-vinylpyridinium) saltsPolymer, 1975
- A Model of Structural Relaxation in GlassJournal of the American Ceramic Society, 1971
- Stress and Volume Relaxation in Annealing Flat GlassJournal of the American Ceramic Society, 1970
- Die Volumenretardation des Polystyrols nach Druck- und TemperatursprüngenRheologica Acta, 1967
- Bulk Creep and Recovery in Systems with Viscosity Dependent upon Free VolumeTransactions of the Society of Rheology, 1961
- Chain Stiffness and the Lattice Theory of Polymer PhasesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1958
- Density Phenomena in the Transformation Range of a Borosilicate Crown GlassJournal of the American Ceramic Society, 1954
- RELATION BETWEEN INELASTIC DEFORMABILITY AND THERMAL EXPANSION OF GLASS IN ITS ANNEALING RANGE*Journal of the American Ceramic Society, 1946