Imaging Atomic Rearrangements In Two-Dimensional Silica Glass: Watching Silica’S Dance

Structural rearrangements control a wide range of behavior in amorphous materials, and visualizing these atomic-scale rearrangements is critical for developing and refining models for how glasses bend, break, and melt. It is difficult, however, to directly image atomic motion in disordered solids. We demonstrate that using aberration-corrected transmission electron microscopy, we can excite and image atomic rearrangements in a two-dimensional silica glass—revealing a complex dance of elastic and plastic deformations, phase transitions, and their interplay. We identified the strain associated with individual ring rearrangements, observed the role of vacancies in shear deformation, and quantified fluctuations at a glass/liquid interface. These examples illustrate the wide-ranging and fundamental materials physics that can now be studied at atomic-resolution via transmission electron microscopy of two-dimensional glasses.

Author
P Y Huang Et Al
Origin
Cornell University, Usa
Journal Title
Science Magazine 11 Oct 2013 342 (6155): 224-227 Doi: 10.1126/Science.1242248
Sector
Special Glass
Class
S 4103

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Imaging Atomic Rearrangements In Two-Dimensional Silica Glass: Watching Silica’S Dance
Science Magazine 11 Oct 2013 342 (6155): 224-227 Doi: 10.1126/Science.1242248
S 4103
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