Abstract

In the vicinity of the glass transition, glass-forming materials exhibit pronounced frequency-dependent changes in the mechanical material properties, the thermal expansion behaviour and the specific heat. The frequency dependence becomes apparent under harmonic stress, strain or temperature excitations. The Prigogine–Defay ratio is a characteristic number which connects the changes in magnitude of these quantities at the glass transition. In order to represent the thermoviscoelastic properties of glass-forming materials in continuum mechanics, a three-dimensional approach which is based on the Gibbs free energy as thermodynamic potential is developed in this article. The Gibbs free energy depends on the stress tensor, the temperature and a set of internal variables which is introduced to take history-dependent phenomena into account. In the vicinity of an equilibrium reference state, the specific Gibbs free energy is approximated up to second order terms. Evaluating the Clausius–Duhem inequality, the constitutive relations for the strain tensor, the entropy and the internal variables are derived. In comparison with other approaches, the entropy, the strain tensor and the internal variables are functionals not only of the stress tensor but also of the temperature. Applying harmonic temperature- or stress-controlled excitations, complex frequency-dependent relations for the specific heat under constant stress, for the thermal expansion coefficients as well as for the dynamic mechanical compliance are obtained. The frequency-dependence of these quantities depicts the experimentally observed behaviour of glass-forming materials as published in literature. Under the assumption of isotropic material behaviour, it is shown that the developed theory is compatible with the Prigogine–Defay inequality for arbitrary values of the material parameters.

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