Dec 5, 2024
10:30am - 11:00am
Hynes, Level 3, Room 310
Maozhi Li1,Yi-Tao Sun2,Yanhui Liu2,Weihua Wang2
Renmin University of China1,Chinese Academy of Sciences2
Maozhi Li1,Yi-Tao Sun2,Yanhui Liu2,Weihua Wang2
Renmin University of China1,Chinese Academy of Sciences2
Glass transition, commonly manifested upon cooling a liquid, is continuous and cooling rate dependent. For decades, the thermodynamic basis in liquid–glass transition has been at the center of debate. Here, long-time isothermal annealing was conducted via molecular dynamics simulations for metallic glasses to explore the connection of physical aging in supercooled liquid and glassy states. An anomalous two-step aging is observed in various metallic glasses, exhibiting features of supercooled liquid dynamics in the first step and glassy dynamics in the second step, respectively. Furthermore, the transition potential energy is independent of initial states, proving that it is intrinsic for a metallic glass at a given temperature. We propose that the observed dynamic transition from supercooled liquid dynamics to glassy dynamics could be glass transition manifested isothermally. On this basis, glass transition is no longer cooling rate dependent, but is shown as a clear phase boundary in the temperature-energy phase diagram. Hence, a modified out-of-equilibrium phase diagram is proposed, providing new insights into the nature of glass transition.