Glass Transition Temperature

Glass Transition Temperature
Reliable equipment for quality control in your production area.
www.mt.com/qcontrol

Glass Transition Temperature Measurement
Visit Our Recommended Sites About Temperature Measurement Here.
BestTemperatureSensor.com

Transitions Glass
Light Up Your Life. Great Deals On Transitions Glass.
GlassDecor.Shopzilla.com

Glass Temperature
Compare prices, brands, and more at Smarter.com.
www.smarter.com

Glass Temperature
Glass temperature Online. Shop Target.com.
www.Target.com

Glass Transition
Millions of Products from Thousands of Stores All in One Place.
www.Shopping.com

Glass Transitions
Looking for glass transitions? Find it from a Trusted Store at Exava.
www.exava.com

Anderson Materials Evaluation, Inc
Thermal analysis lab - DSC, TGA, TMA, DMA, melting or softening temperature, Tg, cure or reaction energy, crystalline phase formation, thermal expansion, decomposition, fill content.
www.andersonmaterials.com

Melting Temperatures of Glass
Find Shopping Deals at Yahoo! Low Prices On All Items.
shopping.yahoo.com

Glass Property Data on MatWeb
MatWeb has detailed property information on over 20,000 entries including Glass and other polymers, metals and engineering materials.
www.matweb.com




Warning: mkdir() [function.mkdir]: Permission denied in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 12

Warning: mkdir() [function.mkdir]: No such file or directory in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 12

Warning: fopen(/home/templatecore2cache//*cluesnet.com/08/08102f16df33f83b3f6f7fba3d81bf8fa6af00e6.tc2cache) [function.fopen]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 130

Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 131

Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 132



The glass transition temperature is the temperature below which the physical properties of amorphous materials vary in a manner similar to those of a solid phase (glassy state), and above which amorphous materials behave like liquids (rubbery state).A material’s glass transition temperature, Tg, is the temperature below which molecules have little relative mobility. Tg is usually applicable to wholly or partially amorphous phases such as glasses and plastics. For inorganic or mineral glasses, such as common silicon dioxide (SiO2) glass, it is the mid-point of a temperature range in which they gradually become more viscous and change from being liquid to solid. Thermoplastic (non-cross-link) polymers are more complex because, in addition to a melting point, Tm, above which all their crystalline structure disappears, such plastics have a second, lower Tg below which they become rigid and brittle, and can crack and shatter under stress. Small molecular weight pure substances such as water have just one such condensed-phase temperature, below which they are solid crystals (or amorphous ice if cooled below Tg fast enough) and above which they are liquids.

Above Tg, the secondary, non-covalent bonds between the polymer chains become weak in comparison to thermal motion, and the polymer becomes rubbery and capable of elasticity (solid mechanics) or plastic deformation without fracture. This behavior is one of the things which make most plastics useful. But such behavior is not exhibited by crosslinked thermosetting plastics which, once Curing (chemistry), are set for life and will shatter rather than deform, never becoming plastic again when heated, nor melting.

Time dependency Consider a molecular liquid which is slowly cooling down. At a certain temperature, the average kinetic energy of molecules no longer exceeds the binding energy between neighboring molecules and growth of organized solid crystal begins. Formation of an ordered system takes a certain amount of time since the molecules must move from their current location to energetically preferred points at crystal nodes. As temperature falls, molecular motion slows down further and, if the cooling rate is fast enough, molecules never reach their destination — the substance enters into dynamic arrest and a disordered, glassy solid (or supercooled liquid) forms. In fact, Kauzmann has argued that if such an arrest did not happen, at still lower temperatures a Kauzmann paradox would arise, where the undercooled liquid would have to be denser and of a lower enthalpy than the crystalline phase. Such arrest apparently takes place at certain temperature, which is called the calorimetric ideal glass transition temperature T0c. This means that glass transition is not merely a Chemical kinetics effect, i.e. merely the result of fast cooling of a melt, but there is an underlying thermodynamic basis for glass formation . The glass transition temperature Tg → T0c as dT/dt → 0.

A full discussion of Tg requires an understanding of mechanical loss mechanisms (vibrational and resonance modes) of specific (usually common in a given material) functional groups and molecular arrangements. Factors such as heat treatment and molecular re-arrangement, vacancies, induced strain and other factors affecting the condition of a material may have an effect on Tg ranging from the subtle to the dramatic. Tg is dependent on the Viscoelasticity materials properties, and so varies with rate of applied load. The silicone toy 'Silly Putty' is a good example of this: pull slowly and it flows; hit it with a hammer and it shatters.

In contrast to the melting points of crystalline materials the glass transition temperature is therefore somewhat dependent on the time-scale of the imposed change. To some extent time and temperature are interchangeable quantities when dealing with glasses, a fact often expressed in the time-temperature superposition principle. An alternative way to discuss the same issue is to say that a glass transition temperature is only truly a point on the temperature scale if the change is imposed at one particular frequency. This is why the ability to modulate the temperature in a Differential scanning calorimetry experiment has made determining Tg considerably more precise. Since Tg is cooling-rate (or frequency) dependent as the glass is formed, the glass transition is not considered a true thermodynamics phase transition by many in the field. They reserve this epithet rather for a transition that is sharp and history-independent.



The IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 1997, 66, 583 defines the glass transition as a second order phase transition in which a supercooled melt yields, on cooling, a glassy structure and properties similar to those of crystalline materials e.g. of an isotropic solid material. Phase transitions are associated with the symmetry breaking. The translation-rotation symmetry in the distribution of atoms and molecules is unchanged at the liquid-glass transition, which retains the topological disorder of fluids. Symmetry changes at glass transition can be viewed when considered not for atoms but for bonds. The disordered material changes its symmetry, namely the Hausdorff dimension of bonds, from Euclidian 3D below to fractal 2.55±0.05- dimensional above the glass transition temperature.

In polymers, Tg is often expressed as the temperature at which the Gibbs free energy is such that the activation energy for the cooperative movement of 50 or so elements of the polymer is exceeded. This allows molecular chains to slide past each other when a force is applied. From this definition, we can see that the introduction of relatively stiff chemical groups (such as benzene rings) will interfere with the flowing process and hence increase Tg. With thermoplastics, the stiffness of the material will drop due to this effect. This is shown in the figure below. It can be seen that when the glass temperature has been reached, the stiffness stays the same for a while, until the material melts. This region is called the rubber plateau.



Tg can be significantly decreased by addition of plasticisers into the polymer matrix. Smaller molecules of plasticizer embed themselves between the polymer chains, increasing the spacing and free volume, and allowing them to move past one another even at lower temperatures. The "new car smell" is due to the initial outgassing of Volatility (chemistry) small-molecule plasticizers used to modify interior plastics (e.g., dashboards) to keep them from cracking in the cold, winter weather. The addition of nonreactive side chain to a polymer can also make the chains stand off from one another, reducing Tg. If a plastic with some desirable properties has a Tg which is too high, it can sometimes be combined with another in a copolymer or composite material with a Tg below the temperature of intended use. Note that some plastics are used at high temperatures, e.g., in automobile engines, and others at low temperatures.

In glasses (including amorphous metals and gels), Tg is related to the energy required to break and re-form covalent bonds in a somewhat less than perfect (may be regarded as an understatement) 3D lattice of covalent bonds. The Tg is therefore influenced by the chemistry of the glass. E.g., add Boron, Sodium, Potassium or Calcium to a silica glass, which have a valency (chemistry) less than 4 and they help break up the 3D lattice and reduce the Tg. Add Phosphorus which has a valency of 5 and it helps re-establish the 3D lattice, increasing Tg.

The Space Shuttle Challenger disaster was caused by rubber O-rings that were below their glass transition temperature on an unusually cold Florida morning, and thus could not flex adequately to form proper seals between sections of the two Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Booster.

Biophysics Proteins also possess a glass transition temperature below which both anharmonic motions and long-range correlated motion within a single molecule are quenched. The origin of this transition is primarily due to "caging" by glassy water , but can also be modeled in the absence of explicit water molecules, suggesting that part of the transition is due to internal protein dynamics.

Vitrification (glass formation below the melting point) can occur when starting with a liquid such as water, usually through very rapid cooling or the introduction of agents that suppress the formation of ice crystals. This is in contrast to ordinary freezing which results in ice crystal formation. Additives used in cryobiology or produced naturally by organisms living in polar regions are called cryoprotectants. Vitrification technology is being used to cryopreservation cell (biology), biological tissue and organ (anatomy) for organ transplant.

Glass transition temperature of some materials PolymerTg (°C)Polyethylene (LDPE)−125 or −30 also citedPolypropylene (atactic)−20Polyvinyl acetate (PVAc)28Polyethylene terephthalate (PET)79Polyvinyl alcohol (PVA)85Polyvinyl chloride (PVC)81Polystyrene95Polypropylene (isotactic)0Poly(3-hydroxybutyrate) (PHB)0Polymethyl methacrylate (atactic)105Chalcogenide AsGeSeTe245ZBLAN265Tellurite279Avatrel; Polynorbornene295Fluoroaluminate400Tyre Rubber160Silica1175These are only mean values, as the glass transition temperature depends on the cooling-ratio, molecular weight distribution and could be influenced by additives.

Note also that for a semi-crystalline material such as Polyethylene that is 60-80% crystalline at room temperature the quoted glass transition refers to what happens to the amorphous part of the material as the temperature is dropped

References



External links



Glass transition temperature - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The glass transition temperature, T g, is the temperature at which an amorphous solid, such as glass or a polymer, becomes brittle on cooling, or soft on heating.

Glass - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
However, the glass transition temperature may be described as analogous to a second-order phase transition where the intensive thermodynamic variables such as the thermal ...

Glass transition temperature
In a composite material, the temperature at which the matrix material changes from a glassy to rubbery state or vice versa ...

Glass transition temperature
In a composite material, the temperature at which the matrix material changes from a glassy to rubbery state or vice versa ...

Glass transition temperature - encyclopedia article - Citizendium
We are creating the world's most trusted encyclopedia and knowledge base. Once you join us and log in, you'll be able to edit this page instantly!

PHYSICAL PARAMETERS OF COOLING IN CRYONICS
Just below glass transition temperature cooling should quickly level-off to prevent cracking from thermal stress. Remaining just below T g for a while can permit thermal stress to ...

Glass transition temperature - What does TG stand for? Acronyms and ...
Acronym Definition; TG: Glass Transition Temperature: TG: Ta Gueule (French: Shut Up) TG: Tactical Gamer (online community) TG: Tactical Guard: TG: Tagesgeld (German)

Mechanical testing and thermal analysis - glass transition temperature ...
Mechanical testing and thermal analysis of rubber at merl. Mechanical Testing of Rubber. A range of mechanical test equipment is available for materials and ...

COMPARISON OF GLASS TRANSITION TEMPERATURE AND STICKY POINT ...
Wall deposition of particles in spray dryers is a key processing problem, and information about the glass transition temperature of the amorphous mate... ...

Glass Transition Temperature Determination
Intertek provides glass transition temperature thermal analysis testing to a wide range of industries and clients.





 
Copyright © 2008 opini8.com - All rights reserved.
Home | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
All Trademarks belong to their repective owners.
Many aspects of this page are used under
commercial commons license from Yahoo!