
Ordering on different length scales in liquid and amorphous materials
Author(s) -
Philip Salmon,
Anita Zeidler
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of statistical mechanics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.428
H-Index - 92
ISSN - 1742-5468
DOI - 10.1088/1742-5468/ab3cce
Subject(s) - amorphous solid , length scale , coordination number , tetrahedron , structure factor , materials science , diffraction , crystallography , colloid , chemical physics , condensed matter physics , optics , physics , chemistry , quantum mechanics , ion
The ordering on different real-space length scales is considered for a variety of glass-forming materials, ranging from densely packed amorphous metals and hard-sphere glassy colloids, to simple tetrahedral systems that include amorphous silicon and patchy colloids, to decorated tetrahedral systems that include amorphous ice and network-forming glasses with the AX 2 stoichiometry (A = Si, Ge or Zn; X = O, S, Se or Cl). The ordering manifests itself as distinct peaks in the total structure factor , where k denotes the magnitude of the scattering vector, with positions k i ( i = 1, 2 or 3) that scale with the nearest-neighbour distance. Different length scales emerge with complexity of the bonding scheme. A peak at k 3 is a generic feature associated with nearest-neighbour contacts, and is therefore present in for all of the materials. A second longer-length scale emerges as a peak at if the bonding scheme assumes a directional character, leading to the formation of tetrahedral motifs in amorphous silicon and patchy colloids, or to Se–Se–Se chain segments in glassy selenium. A third still-longer-length scale appears for AX 2 glasses as a first sharp diffraction peak at , where the scaled peak position depends on the character of the local network of A atoms. The geometrical origin of the peaks in and corresponding partial structure factors is considered, and equations are given for predicting the peak positions. The change in system fragility with the emergence of ordering on different length scales is discussed, along with the effect of pressure.