Glass transition dynamics in water and other tetrahedral liquids: 'order-disorder' transitions versus 'normal' glass transitions

被引:29
作者
Angell, C. Austen [1 ]
机构
[1] Arizona State Univ, Dept Chem & Biochem, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1088/0953-8984/19/20/205112
中图分类号
O469 [凝聚态物理学];
学科分类号
070205 ;
摘要
We review some aspects of the confusion concerning the glass transition in water, and then show that it must be of a quite different character from that in other molecular liquids, and in fact is the kinetically controlled part of a classical order-disorder transition. ( This is the conclusion reached in a review of the low temperature phenomenology of amorphous water currently being published in Science by the present author. Material that would normally appear in the present abbreviated paper will appear in the Science article to which the interested reader is referred.) We do this using a combination of (i) thermodynamic reasoning for 'bulk' water ( based on known properties of supercooled water and nearly glassy water), and ( ii) direct measurements on nanoscopic ( non-crystallizing) water. Both require the heat capacity to be sharply peaked near 220 K and thus to imply the existence of a 'strong-to-fragile' transition during heating. Both require the excess heat capacity to drop to near-vanishing values in the vicinity of 130-150 K. The similarity to order-disorder transitions in crystalline solids is noted, the relation to the second critical point scenario for water is discussed, and the modelling of the anomaly by current theories is considered. Finally we argue that water, with its fragile-to-strong liquid transition below the melting point, links ( lies in between) the extremes of classical network liquids ( where this transition occurs only above the experimentally accessible range) and fragile molecular liquids, where the fragile-to-strong transition is pushed beneath the glass temperature.
引用
收藏
页数:6
相关论文
共 43 条
[1]   ON TEMPERATURE DEPENDENCE OF COOPERATIVE RELAXATION PROPERTIES IN GLASS-FORMING LIQUIDS [J].
ADAM, G ;
GIBBS, JH .
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 1965, 43 (01) :139-&
[2]   WATER-II IS A STRONG LIQUID [J].
ANGELL, CA .
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY, 1993, 97 (24) :6339-6341
[3]   Energy landscapes for cooperative processes: nearly ideal glass transitions, liquid-liquid transitions and folding transitions [J].
Angell, CA .
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY A-MATHEMATICAL PHYSICAL AND ENGINEERING SCIENCES, 2005, 363 (1827) :415-430
[4]   Liquid fragility and the glass transition in water and aqueous solutions [J].
Angell, CA .
CHEMICAL REVIEWS, 2002, 102 (08) :2627-2649
[5]   Calorimetric studies of the energy landscapes of glassformers by hyperquenching methods [J].
Angell, CA .
JOURNAL OF THERMAL ANALYSIS AND CALORIMETRY, 2002, 69 (03) :785-794
[6]   Water and its anomalies in perspective: tetrahedral liquids with and without liquid-liquid phase transitions [J].
Angell, CA ;
Bressel, RD ;
Hemmati, M ;
Sare, EJ ;
Tucker, JC .
PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 2000, 2 (08) :1559-1566
[7]  
ANGELL CA, 2007, UNPUB SCIENCE
[8]   Comment on "Pressure dependence of fragile-to-strong transition and a possible second critical point in supercooled confined water" [J].
Cerveny, Silvina ;
Colmenero, Juan ;
Alegria, Angel .
PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 2006, 97 (18)
[9]   Glass transition in pure and doped amorphous solid water: An ultrafast microcalorimetry study [J].
Chonde, M. ;
Brindza, M. ;
Sadtchenko, Vlad .
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 2006, 125 (09)
[10]  
COOPER AR, 1982, PHYS CHEM GLASSES, V23, P44