Kovacs Effect in Glass with Material Memory Revealed in Non-Equilibrium Particle Interactions
Matteo Lulli, Chun-Shing Lee, Ling-Han Zhang, Hai-Yao Deng and, Chi-Hang Lam

TL;DR
This study investigates the Kovacs effect in glassy systems using a lattice model, revealing how non-equilibrium particle interactions cause memory effects and depend on system fragility.
Contribution
It demonstrates the origin of the Kovacs hump through non-equilibrium energy distributions in a lattice model, linking fragility to the hump's characteristics.
Findings
Kovacs hump is explained by non-equilibrium energy distributions.
Hump height and timing depend on system fragility.
Structural temperature dynamics vary with fragility.
Abstract
The Kovacs effect is a remarkable feature of the ageing dynamics of glass forming liquids near the glass transition temperature. It consists in a non-monotonous evolution of the volume/enthalpy after a succession of two abrupt temperature changes: first from a high initial temperature to a much lower annealing temperature followed by a smaller second jump back to a slightly higher final temperature . The second change is performed when the instantaneous value of the volume/enthalpy coincides with the equilibrium one at the final temperature. While this protocol might be expected to yield equilibrium dynamics right after the second temperature change, one observes the so-called Kovacs hump in glassy systems. In this paper we apply such thermal protocol to the Distinguishable Particles Lattice Model (DPLM) for a wide range of fragility of the system. We study the Kovacs…
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