Front-Mediated Melting of Isotropic Ultrastable Glasses.
Abstract
Ultrastable vapor-deposited glasses display uncommon material properties. Most remarkably,
upon heating they are believed to melt via a liquid front that originates at the free
surface and propagates over a mesoscopic crossover length, before crossing over to
bulk melting. We combine swap Monte Carlo with molecular dynamics simulations to prepare
and melt isotropic amorphous films of unprecedendtly high kinetic stability. We are
able to directly observe both bulk and front melting, and the crossover between them.
We measure the front velocity over a broad range of conditions, and a crossover length
scale that grows to nearly 400 particle diameters in the regime accessible to simulations.
Our results disentangle the relative roles of kinetic stability and vapor deposition
in the physical properties of stable glasses.
Type
Journal articleSubject
Science & TechnologyPhysical Sciences
Physics, Multidisciplinary
Physics
ORGANIC GLASSES
STABLE GLASSES
TRANSFORMATION
STABILITY
INDOMETHACIN
TEMPERATURE
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24989Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1103/physrevlett.123.175501Publication Info
Flenner, Elijah; Berthier, Ludovic; Charbonneau, Patrick; & Fullerton, Christopher
J (2019). Front-Mediated Melting of Isotropic Ultrastable Glasses. Physical review letters, 123(17). pp. 175501. 10.1103/physrevlett.123.175501. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24989.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Patrick Charbonneau
Professor of Chemistry
Professor Charbonneau studies soft matter. His work combines theory and simulation
to understand the glass problem, protein crystallization, microphase formation, and colloidal
assembly in external fields.

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