Abstract

Volume and enthalpy relaxation in glassy materials subjected to a temperature jump ΔT = T0 − T can conveniently be compared on the basis of the fictive relaxation rate Rf = −(dTf/d log t)i. It has been shown that within the current phenomenological model, involving the stretched exponential relaxation function and the reduced time integral, the Rf can be described by a simple equation Rf = 2.303/[e/ΔTβ + σ]. A remarkable feature of this equation is that it separates the contribution of nonexponentiality (β) and nonlinearity (σ). The nonlinearity contribution corresponds to structural changes during the relaxation process. It can be expressed for the Narayanaswamy−Moynihan (NM) model as σ = (1 − x)Δh*/RTg2 and for the Adam−Gibbs (AG) model as σ = BT2/T(Tg − T2)2. This equation for Rf(ΔT) predicts an increasing fictive relaxation rate with the magnitude of the temperature jump and it has been tested by using reported NM and AG parameters and experimental volume and enthalpy relaxation data reported for vari...

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