How do the properties of a glass depend on the cooling rate? A computer simulation study of a Lennard-Jones system
Katharina Vollmayr, Walter Kob, Kurt Binder (Institute of Physics,, Mainz)

TL;DR
This study uses molecular dynamics simulations to explore how the cooling rate affects the transition and properties of glasses formed from a Lennard-Jones system, revealing that slower cooling results in sharper transitions and more ordered structures.
Contribution
It provides a detailed computational analysis of the dependence of glass properties on cooling rate, linking microscopic structure and dynamics to macroscopic behavior.
Findings
Slower cooling sharpens the glass transition.
Decreasing cooling rate lowers the glass transition temperature.
Structural order increases with slower cooling.
Abstract
Using molecular dynamics computer simulations we investigate how the glass transition and the properties of the resulting glass depend on the cooling rate with which the sample has been quenched. This is done by studying a two component Lennard-Jones system which is coupled to a heat bath whose temperature is decreased from a high temperature, where the system is a liquid, to zero temperature, where the system is a glass. The temperature of the heat bath is decreased linearly in time, i.e. , where is the cooling rate. In accordance with simple theoretical arguments and with experimental observations we find that the glass transition, as observed in the specific heat and the thermal expansion coefficient, becomes sharper when is decreased. A decrease of the cooling rate also leads to a decrease of the glass transition temperature and we…
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