Publication | Closed Access
The Microscopic Basis of the Glass Transition in Polymers from Neutron Scattering Studies
347
Citations
24
References
1995
Year
EngineeringGlass-forming LiquidGlass MaterialBoson PeakSoft MatterPolymersGlass TransitionPolymer PhysicMicroscopic BasisThermodynamicsRecent NeutronPolymer ChemistryMaterials SciencePhysicsNeutron Scattering StudiesPhysical ChemistryPolymer MeltPolymer ScienceApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsMicroscopic DynamicsPolymer Modeling
Recent neutron scattering experiments on the microscopic dynamics of polymers below and above the glass transition temperature T(g) are reviewed. The results presented cover different dynamic processes appearing in glasses: local motions, vibrations, and different relaxation processes such as alpha- and beta-relaxation. For the alpha-relaxation, which occurs above T(g), it is possible to extend the time-temperature superposition principle, which is valid for polymers on a macroscopic scale, to the microscopic time scale. However, this principle is not applicable for temperatures approaching T(g). Below T(g), an inelastic excitation at a frequency of some hundred gigahertz (on the order of several wave numbers), the "boson peak," survives from a quasi-elastic overdamped scattering law at high temperatures. The connection between this boson peak and the fast dynamic process appearing near T(g) is discussed.
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