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A
Breakthrough in Glass
Monday, June 23, 2008
A
close look at a colloidal gel.
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Credit:
Dr. Paddy Royall
Imagine a plane that has
wings made out of glass. Thanks to a major breakthrough in
understanding the nature of glass by scientists at the University
of Bristol, this has just become a possibility.
Despite
its solid appearance, glass is actually a ‘jammed’
state of matter that moves very slowly. Like cars in a traffic
jam, atoms in a glass can’t reach their destination because
the route is blocked by their neighbors, so it never quite
becomes a ‘proper’ solid.
For
more than 50 years most scientists have tried to understand just
what glass is. Work so far has concentrated on trying to
understand the traffic jam, but now Dr Paddy Royall from the
University of Bristol, with colleagues in Canberra and Tokyo, has
shown that the problem really lies with the destination, not with
the traffic jam.
Publishing
today (22 June 2008) in Nature
Materials,
the team has revealed that glass ‘fails’ to be a
solid due to the special atomic structures that form in a glass
when it cools (ie, when the atoms arrive at their destination).
Royall
explained: “Some materials crystallize as they cool,
arranging their atoms into a highly regular pattern called a
lattice. But although glass ‘wants’ to be a crystal,
as it cools the atoms become jammed in a nearly random
arrangement, preventing it from forming a regular lattice.
"Back
in the 1950s, Sir Charles Frank in the Physics Department at
Bristol University suggested that the arrangement of the ‘jam’
should form what is known as an icosahedron, but at the time he
was unable to provide experimental proof. We set out to see if he
was right.”
The
problem is you can’t watch what happens to atoms as they
cool because they are just too small. So using special particles
called colloids that mimic atoms, but are just large enough to be
visible using state-of-the-art microscopy, Royall cooled some
down and watched what happened.
What
he found was that the gel these particles formed also ‘wants’
to be a crystal, but it fails to become one due to the formation
of icosahedra-like structures – exactly as Frank had
predicted 50 years ago. It is the formation of these structures
that underlie jammed materials and explains why a glass is a
glass and not a liquid – or a solid.
Knowing
the structure formed by atoms as a glass cools represents a major
breakthrough in our understanding of meta-stable materials and
will allow further development of new materials such as metallic
glasses.
Metals
normally crystallize when they cool, unfortunately stress builds
up along the boundaries between crystals, which leads to metal
failure. For example, the world’s first jetliner, the
British built De Havilland Comet, fell out of the sky due to
metal failure. If a metal could be made to cool with the same
internal structure as a glass and without crystal grain
boundaries, it would be less likely to fail.
Metallic
glasses could be suitable for a whole range of products that need
to be flexible such as aircraft wings, golf clubs and engine
parts.
Source:
University of Bristol

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