First-Order Phase Transition in Liquid Ag to the Heterogeneous G-Phase

Q An and WL Johnson and K Samwer and SL Corona and WA Goddard, JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY LETTERS, 11, 632-645 (2020).

DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.9b03699

A molten metal is an atomic liquid that lacks directional bonding and is free from chemical ordering effects. Experimentally, liquid metals can be undercooled by up to similar to 20% of their melting temperature but crystallize rapidly in subnanosecond time scales at deeper undercooling. To address this limited metastability with respect to crystallization, we employed molecular dynamics simulations to study the thermodynamics and kinetics of the glass transition and crystallization in deeply undercooled liquid Ag. We present direct evidence that undercooled liquid Ag undergoes a first-order configurational freezing transition from the high-temperature homogeneous disordered liquid phase (L) to a metastable, heterogeneous, configurationally ordered state that displays elastic rigidity with a persistent and finite shear modulus, mu. We designate this ordered state as the G-phase and conclude it is a metastable non-crystalline phase. We show that the L-G transition occurs by nucleation of the G-phase from the L-phase. Both the L- and G-phases are metastable because both ultimately crystallize. The observed first- order transition is reversible: the G-phase displays a first-order melting transition to the L-phase at a coexistence temperature, T-G,T-M. We develop a thermodynamic description of the two phases and their coexistence boundary.

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