12 research outputs found
Magnetic and electronic phase transitions probed by nanomechanical resonators
The reduced dimensionality of two-dimensional (2D) materials results in characteristic types of magnetically and electronically ordered phases. However, only few methods are available to study this order, in particular in ultrathin insulating antiferromagnets that couple weakly to magnetic and electronic probes. Here, we demonstrate that phase transitions in thin membranes of 2D antiferromagnetic FePS3, MnPS3 and NiPS3 can be probed mechanically via the temperature-dependent resonance frequency and quality factor. The observed relation between mechanical motion and antiferromagnetic order is shown to be mediated by the specific heat and reveals a strong dependence of the Néel temperature of FePS3 on electrostatically induced strain. The methodology is not restricted to magnetic order, as we demonstrate by probing an electronic charge-density-wave phase in 2H-TaS2. It thus offers the potential to characterize phase transitions in a wide variety of materials, including those that are antiferromagnetic, insulating or so thin that conventional bulk characterization methods become unsuitable
On relaxation nature of glass transition in amorphous materials
A short review on relaxation theories of glass transition is presented. The main attention is paid to modern aspects of the glass transition equation qτg = C, suggested by Bartenev in 1951 (q – cooling rate of the melt, τg – structural relaxation time at the glass transition temperature Tg). This equation represents a criterion of structural relaxation at transition from liquid to glass at T = Tg (analogous to the condition of mechanical relaxation ωτ = 1, where the maximum of mechanical loss is observed). The empirical parameter С = δTg has the meaning of temperature range δTg that characterizes the liquid-glass transition. Different approaches of δTg calculation are reviewed. In the framework of the model of delocalized atoms a modified kinetic criterion of glass transition is proposed (q/Tg)τg = Cg, where Cg ≅ 7·10−3 is a practically universal dimensionless constant. It depends on fraction of fluctuation volume fg, which is frozen at the glass transition temperature Cg = fg/ln(1/fg). The value of fg is approximately constant fg ≅ 0.025. At Tg the process of atom delocalization, i.e. its displacement from the equilibrium position, is frozen. In silicate glasses atom delocalization is reduced to critical displacement of bridge oxygen atom in Si-O-Si bridge necessary to switch a valence bond according to Muller and Nemilov. An equation is derived for the temperature dependence of viscosity of glass-forming liquids in the wide temperature range, including the liquid-glass transition and the region of higher temperatures. Notion of (bridge) atom delocalization is developed, which is related to necessity of local low activation deformation of structural network for realization of elementary act of viscous flow – activated switch of a valence (bridge) bond. Without atom delocalization (“trigger mechanism”) a switch of the valence bond is impossible and, consequently, the viscous flow. Thus the freezing of atom delocalization process at low temperatures, around Tg, leads to the cease of the viscous flow and transition of a melt to a glassy state. This occurs when the energy of disordered lattice thermal vibrations averaged to one atom becomes equal or less than the energy of atom delocalization. The Bartenev equation for cooling rate dependence of glass transition temperature Tg = Tg(q) is discussed. The value of fg calculated from the data on the Tg(q) dependence coincides with result of the fg calculation using the data on viscosity near the glass transition. Derivation of the Bartenev equation with the account of temperature dependence of activation energy of glass transition process is considered. The obtained generalized relation describes the Tg(q) dependence in a wider interval of the cooling rate compared Bartenev equation. Experimental data related to standard cooling rate q = 3 K/min were used in this work
Glass transition criterion and plastic deformation of glass
We develop the notion that amorphous substances undergo reversible configurational structural changes accompanied by local expansion and compression (atom delocalization) near the glass transition temperature. They are similar in nature to configurational changes in the structure of glasses in the case of reversible frozen (plastic) deformation and its thermally stimulated relaxation. We assume that the glass-liquid transition is associated with the process of atom delocalization caused by bond breaking and formation of elementary excitations e.g. configurons. We discuss the possibility of detection of configuron formation and atom delocalization near glass transition based on temperature dependence of X-rays or neutron first sharp diffraction (pair distribution function) minimum
Investigation of the structural-phase state under superplastic deformation of the Co-Ni-Nb alloy
Analysis of the minimal model for the enthalpy relaxation and recovery in glass transition: application to constant-rate differential scanning calorimetry
Research and application on simulation of oilfield 3D in-situ stress field by multi-information co-processing
High thermoelectric performance of oxyselenides: intrinsically low thermal conductivity of Ca-doped BiCuSeO
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