The potential of X-ray photon correlation spectroscopy (XPCS) to shed light on the mysterious phenomena that occur when a liquid nears a glass-like state has been demonstrated by four RIKEN physicists. On cooling, many liquids undergo a sharp switch at their freezing points, snapping into crystalline solids. The most famous example is water, with a freezing point of 0° Celsius. In contrast, many liquid polymers and other materials go through a more graceful transition known as the glass transition. The solids they form have structures closer to the random order of a liquid than the ordered structure of crystalline solids such as ice and metals. Glass is a classic example: it is a solid at room temperature but its molecules are arranged in a disordered manner.
There are many unanswered questions about the glass transition. “The phenomenon of glass transition is one of the biggest mysteries of soft-matter physics”, notes Taiki Hoshino of the RIKEN SPring-8 Center. “Some scientists even question whether the glass transition is really a transition or if it just looks like one.”
One key that may help unlock the mysteries about the glass transition is the concept of dynamical heterogeneity—fluctuations in space and time in the local dynamic behaviour of molecules. “Many researchers believe that the glass transition can be explained in terms of dynamical heterogeneity”, says Hoshino.
Hoshino and three RIKEN SPring-8 Center colleagues have used synchrotron-generated X-rays to measure dynamical heterogeneity in a liquid polymer near its glass-transition temperature. During the measurements, the polymer was squeezed between a stationary cylindrical rod and a moving substrate. Liquid closer to the substrate moved faster than liquid near the rod, resulting in a velocity gradient across the liquid. The team found that the dynamical heterogeneity decreased as the velocity gradient was increased. This confirmed the predictions of a molecular dynamics simulation published more than 20 years ago.
The researchers conducted their experiments with XPCS, which uses the speckle pattern generated by X-rays to obtain information about a sample. “If the scatterers in the sample move, the scattering pattern changes”, explains Hoshino. “These fluctuations reveal information about the motion of the scatterers.” Hoshino notes that XPCS hasn’t enjoyed as much popularity among soft-matter physicists as other techniques, but he hopes this study will convince others of its potential. “Our results show that XPCS is a powerful technique for studying glass transition”, he says.
They have published their work in Physical Review Letters.