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Brazilian researcher proposes latest definition of glass

13th October 2017
Enaie Azambuja
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Is glass a solid or a liquid? This question, which has been vigorously discussed by specialists in the field for some decades, has just been answered anew: “Glass is a non-equilibrium, non-crystalline state of matter that appears solid on a short time scale but continuously relaxes toward the liquid state.” A more elaborate alternative definition is this: “Glass is a non-equilibrium, non-crystalline condensed state of matter that exhibits a glass transition".

"The structure of glasses is similar to that of their parent supercooled liquids (SCL), and they spontaneously relax toward the SCL state. Their ultimate fate, in the limit of infinite time, is to crystallise.”

These new definitions are proposed in an article published in the Journal of Non-Crystalline Solids. Its authors are Edgar Dutra Zanotto, a professor in the Department of Materials Engineering at the Federal University of São Carlos (UFSCar) in Brazil and coordinator of the Center for Research, Teaching, and Innovation in Glass (CerTEV), one of the Research, Innovation and Dissemination Centers (RIDCs) funded by FAPESP, and John C. Mauro, Professor of Materials Science & Engineering at Penn State University in the United States.

“There are several definitions of glass, but most of them contain serious errors. Many definitions say glass is a solid, and others say it’s an isotropic material [whose properties are the same in all directions], but many glasses are not,” Zanotto told Agência FAPESP.

“For this reason, we decided to undertake a critical and condensed review of the state of the art on glass, showing that its structure is very different from that of solids. Glass relaxes continuously and crystallises.”

The initiative of proposing a new definition of glass arose when Zanotto gave the Turner Memorial Lecture, entitled “Glass Myths and Marvels,” during the Society of Glass Technology (SGT) Centenary Conference at the University of Sheffield in the United Kingdom in September 2016. Zanotto is the first Brazilian to have been invited to deliver the lecture.

Held at the university since 1966, the Turner Memorial Lecture has been delivered by such luminaries as Sir Harry Kroto (1939-2016), who won the 1996 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the discovery of fullerenes (allotropes of carbon also known as carbon nanotubes); Sir Alastair Pilkington (1920-95), who invented the float process used worldwide to make sheet glass; and Larry L. Hench (1938-2015), the inventor of bioglass.

One of the questions raised by Zanotto during the lecture was precisely whether glass is a solid or a liquid. The question resulted in a heated debate with several scientists in the audience, and especially Arun Varshneya, Emeritus Professor of Glass Science & Engineering at Alfred University in the United States, a well-known “glass guru” and the author of one of the most widely read books on glass in the world.

Following the discussion, Zanotto began exchanging emails with Varshneya and writing an article to demystify the idea that glass is a solid, as advocated by the Indian-born American scientist.

“Countless proofs that glass has very different characteristics from solids have been presented in dozens of articles,” Zanotto said. One of these is that the structure of glass is very similar to that of the liquids from which it is formed.

Another is that glass flows (deforms) spontaneously over time and in response to minimal pressure, which can be less than the action of gravity. Crystalline solids deform only in response to external pressure that is inversely proportional to temperature. The lower the temperature, the greater the pressure that must be applied to a crystalline solid to deform it, Zanotto explained.

“On the other hand, any positive pressure or stress different from zero is sufficient for glass to flow at any temperature,” he said. “The time it takes to deform depends mainly on temperature and chemical composition. If the temperature to which glass is submitted is close to zero Kelvin [absolute zero], it will take an infinitely long time to deform, but if it is heated, it will at once begin to flow.”

The third characteristic that distinguishes glass from a solid is that at the end of its existence, it eventually crystallises, whereas a crystal, for example, neither flows nor crystallises because it is already in a solid state.

Based on these three characteristics, Zanotto and Mauro propose to define glass as a “frozen liquid” – a material with the structure of a liquid that has been frozen without crystallising by being cooled (quenched) below a certain temperature, known as the glass transition temperature.

“It took us a long time to bring together these concepts of solid and liquid, crystal and non-crystal, and frozen, which in the article has the meaning of a temporary state, and to arrive at the modern enhanced definition of glass,” Zanotto said.

The article “The glassy state of matter: its definition and ultimate fate” (doi: 10.1016/j.jnoncrysol.2017.05.019), by Zanotto and Mauro, can be read in the Journal of Non-Crystalline Solids.

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