Interpretation of the apparent activation energy of glass transition
Koun Shirai

TL;DR
This paper offers a new interpretation of the apparent activation energy in glass transition, viewing it as a phase transition from liquid to solid, and clarifies the differences between actual and apparent energy barriers.
Contribution
It proposes a novel perspective on glass transition, relating the apparent activation energy to actual energy barriers and the ratio of glass transition temperature to transition width.
Findings
Actual energy barrier is smaller than the apparent activation energy.
The ratio T_g/ΔT_g influences the overestimation of activation energy.
No divergence in viscosity suggests no transition at T_0.
Abstract
The temperature dependence of the viscosity of glass is a major concern in the field of glass research. Strong deviations from the Arrhenius law make the interpretation of the activation energy difficult. In the present study, a reasonable interpretation of the apparent activation energy is demonstrated along similar lines as those adopted in solid-state physics and chemistry. In contrast to the widely held view that phase transition in glass occurs at the reference temperature according to the Vogel--Fulcher--Tammann formula, in the present work the transition observed at the glass-transition temperature is regarded as a phase transition from the liquid to solid phases. A distinct feature of glass is that the energy barrier significantly changes in the transition range with width . This change in the energy barrier alters the manner in which the apparent…
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