4.7 Article

Polymer Glass Formation: Role of Activation Free Energy, Configurational Entropy, and Collective Motion

Journal

MACROMOLECULES
Volume 54, Issue 7, Pages 3001-3033

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.macromol.0c02740

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21833008, 21790344, 21973089]
  2. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFB0703701]
  3. Jilin Provincial science and technology development program [20190101021JH]
  4. Key Research Program of Frontier Sciences, CAS [QYZDY-SSW-SLH027]

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The perspective provides insights into the theory and development of polymer glass formation, focusing on the role of fluid entropy and collective particle motion. It traces the evolution of the entropy theory from observations of liquid dynamics to the formulation of predictive models like the Adam-Gibbs model. The development of the generalized entropy theory and string model have advanced the understanding of polymeric glass formation dynamics.
We provide a perspective on polymer glass formation, with an emphasis on models in which the fluid entropy and collective particle motion dominate the theoretical description and data analysis. The entropy theory of glass formation has its origins in experimental observations relating to correlations between the fluid entropy and liquid dynamics going back nearly a century ago, and it has entered a new phase in recent years. We first discuss the dynamics of liquids in the high-temperature Arrhenius regime, where transition state theory is formally applicable. We then summarize the evolution of the entropy theory from a qualitative framework for organizing and interpreting temperature-dependent viscosity data by Kauzmann to the formulation of a hypothetical ideal thermodynamic glass transition by Gibbs and DiMarzio, followed by seminal measurements linking entropy and relaxation by Bestul and Chang and the Adam-Gibbs (AG) model of glass formation rationalizing the observations of Bestul and Chang. These developments laid the groundwork for the generalized entropy theory (GET), which merges an improved lattice model of polymer thermodynamics accounting for molecular structural details and enabling the analytic calculation of the configurational entropy with the AG model, giving rise to a highly predictive model of the segmental structural relaxation time of polymeric glass-forming liquids. The development of the GET has occurred in parallel with the string model of glass formation in which concrete realizations of the cooperatively rearranging regions are identified and quantified for a wide range of polymeric and other glass-forming materials. The string model has shown that many of the assumptions of AG are well supported by simulations, while others are certainly not, giving rise to an entropy theory of glass formation that is largely in accord with the GET. As the GET and string models continue to be refined, these models progressively grow into a more unified framework, and this Perspective reviews the present status of development of this promising approach to the dynamics of polymeric glass-forming liquids.

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