Liquid glass transition : a unified theory from the two band model

Author(s)

    • Kitamura, Toyoyuki

Bibliographic Information

Liquid glass transition : a unified theory from the two band model

Toyoyuki Kitamura

(Elsevier insights)

Elsevier, 2013

1st ed

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

A glass is disordered material like a viscous liquid and behaves mechanically like a solid. A glass is normally formed by supercooling the viscous liquid fast enough to avoid crystallization, and the liquid-glass transition occurs in diverse manners depending on the materials, their history, and the supercooling processes, among other factors. The glass transition in colloids, molecular systems, and polymers is studied worldwide. This book presents a unified theory of the liquid-glass transition on the basis of the two band model from statistical quantum field theory associated with the temperature Green's function method. It is firmly original in its approach and will be of interest to researchers and students specializing in the glass transition across the physical sciences.

Table of Contents

1.Introduction2.Sound and Elastic Waves in the Classical Theory3.Fundamentals of Quantum Field Theory4.Temperature Green's Functions5.Real Time Green's Functions and Temperature Green's Functions6.The Structure of Glasses Associated with Phonons7.The Liquid-Glass Transition8.Phonon Operators in Nonlinear Interaction Potentials9.Phonon and Sound Fluctuation Modes and Thermal Conductivities10.The Liquid-Glass Transition in Multi-Component Liquids11.Extension of the Two Band Model

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