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Recently, ultrastable glasses have been created through vapor deposition. Subsequently, computer simulation algorithms have been proposed that mimic the vapor deposition process and result in simulated glasses with increased stability. In addition, random pinning has been used to generate very stable glassy configurations without the need for lengthy annealing or special algorithms inspired by vapor deposition. Kinetic and mechanical stability of experimental ultrastable glasses is compared to those of experimental glasses formed by cooling. We provide the basis for a similar comparison for simulated stable glasses: we analyze the kinetic and mechanical stability of simulated glasses formed by cooling at a constant rate by examining the transformation time to a liquid upon rapid re-heating, the inherent structure energies, and the shear modulus. The kinetic and structural stability increases slowly with decreasing cooling rate. The methods outlined here can be used to assess kinetic and mechanical stability of simulated glasses generated by using specialized algorithms.
We use computer simulations to study the cooling rate dependence of the stability and energetics of model glasses created at constant pressure conditions and compare the results with glasses formed at constant volume conditions. To examine the stabil
Unlike crystals, glasses age or devitrify over time to lower their free energy, reflecting their intrinsically non-equilibrium nature. This lack of stability is a serious issue in many industrial applications. Here, we show by numerical simulations t
Vesicles prepared in water from a series of diblock copolymers and termed polymersomes are physically characterized. With increasing molecular weight $bar{M}_n$, the hydrophobic core thickness $d$ for the self-assembled bilayers of polyethyleneoxide
The role of porous structure and glass density in response to compressive deformation of amorphous materials is investigated via molecular dynamics simulations. The disordered, porous structures were prepared by quenching a high-temperature binary mi
A wide range of materials can exist in microscopically disordered solid forms, referred to as amorphous solids or glasses. Such materials -- oxide glasses and metallic glasses, to polymer glasses, and soft solids such as colloidal glasses, emulsions