Designing Glasses with Tunable Structure and Properties by Computer Simulation

2009 ◽  
Vol 1229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liping Huang ◽  
Fenglin Yuan ◽  
Qing Zhao

AbstractA normal solid becomes stiffer when squeezed and softer when heated. In contrast, silica glass behaves the opposite way: its elastic moduli decrease upon compression and increase upon heating. Silica glass is also known to densify under compression and radiations. These have been long-standing mysteries in materials science. Using molecular dynamics simulation, we uncovered the structural origins of the anomalous thermo-mechanical behaviors and mechanisms of permanent densification in silica glass. Accordingly, these anomalies can be attributed to localized structural transitions, analogous to those that occur in the crystalline counterparts. The irreversible densification in silica glass is achieved through structural transition involving bond breaking and re-formation under a combination of high pressure and temperature. We further revealed that the anomalous thermo-mechanical behaviors are inherently connected to the ability of the glass to undergo permanent densification. Our computer simulations demonstrate that by processing in ways that gradually eliminates anomalous thermo-mechanical behaviors, degree of the glass to undergo densification can be eventually eradicated. This provides the conceptual foundation for the bottom-up design of new glasses with tunable structure and properties.

2017 ◽  
Vol 96 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Emina Ryuo ◽  
Daisuke Wakabayashi ◽  
Akihide Koura ◽  
Fuyuki Shimojo

Author(s):  
Lan Mai Thi

We have studied structure of silica glass at different pressures and temperature of 300K by using Molecular Dynamics simulation (MD) method. The model consists of 6000 atoms (2000 Si, 4000 O atoms) with the periodic boundary condition. We applied the Morse-Stretch potentials which describe the pairwise interactions between ions for SiO2 system. There is structural phase transformation from tetrahedra (SiO4) to octahedra (SiO6) network structure. There is splitting in the Si-Si pair radial distribution function (PRDF) at high pressure (100 GPa). The original of this splitting relates to the edge- and face-sharing bonds. The new second peak of the O-O PRDF at the high pressure originates from oxygen atoms of the edge-sharing bonds. Thus, there is rearrangement of O atoms. O atoms have tendency to more order arrangement that leads to form some oxygen hcp and fcc structure in the model at high pressure.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kazuaki Z. Takahashi ◽  
Takeshi Aoyagi ◽  
Jun-ichi Fukuda

AbstractPhase transition of anisotropic materials is ubiquitously observed in physics, biology, materials science, and engineering. Nevertheless, how anisotropy of constituent molecules affects the phase transition dynamics is still poorly understood. Here we investigate numerically the phase transition of a simple model system composed of anisotropic molecules, and report on our discovery of multistep nucleation of nuclei with layered positional ordering (smectic ordering), from a fluid-like nematic phase with orientational order only (no positional order). A trinity of molecular dynamics simulation, machine learning, and molecular cluster analysis yielding free energy landscapes unambiguously demonstrates the dynamics of multistep nucleation process involving characteristic metastable clusters that precede supercritical smectic nuclei and cannot be accounted for by the classical nucleation theory. Our work suggests that molecules of simple shape can exhibit rich and complex nucleation processes, and our numerical approach will provide deeper understanding of phase transitions and resulting structures in anisotropic materials such as biological systems and functional materials.


2012 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 025402 ◽  
Author(s):  
T Deschamps ◽  
A Kassir-Bodon ◽  
C Sonneville ◽  
J Margueritat ◽  
C Martinet ◽  
...  

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