From Supercooled Liquids to Glasses: Current Challenges for Amorphous Materials (Aug. 7 - 18, 2017)
Oct 20, 2021

Aug 7-18,2017

Beijing, China

International Advisory Board

Mingwei Chen, < mwchen@wpi-aimr.tohoku.ac.jp >, Johns Hopkins University

Corey O’Hern, < corey.ohern@yale.edu>, Yale University

Yue Wu, < yuewu@physics.unc.edu >, University of North Carolina

 

Local Organizing Committee

Wei-hua Wang <whw@iphy.ac.cn >, Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Ke Chen, <kechen@iphy.ac.cn >, Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Fangfu Ye, < fye@iphy.ac.cn >, Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Maozhi Li, < maozhili@ruc.edu.cn >, Renmin University of China

Limei Xu, < limei.xu@pku.edu.cn >, Peking University

 

 

Amorphous materials are a large sub-set of condensed matters that have no obvious long range structural order. Condensed phases begin at the gas-liquid transition when the attraction between molecules becomes comparable to the thermodynamic temperature. Further cooling down of the liquids may result in crystallization or vitrification depending on the cooling rate. A comprehensive statistical description of the condensed matters is often complicated by the sheer number of interacting elements in those systems. So far, only crystalline solids are relatively well understood thanks to their clear structural symmetries. For both liquids and glasses, a general theoretical framework is still lacking. In particular, supercooled liquids and glasses are thermodynamically out of equilibrium, adding challenges to the current paradigm of condensed matter physics.

 

The puzzling questions surrounding supercooled liquids and glasses can be roughly divided into four categories: structures, thermodynamics, dynamics and application properties. Recently, it has become more and more clear that the challenges for amorphous materials are not confined to their individual categories, but are deeply intertwined at the most fundamental level. Therefore there is a need for integrating studies on structures, thermodynamics, dynamics and application properties of glasses, and for developing better connections between liquids and glasses. Through these efforts, we might be able to reach a new level of understanding of amorphous materials that will benefit both fundamental sciences and technological applications. The general objective of this program is to bring together the leading researchers in supercooled fluids and glasses across several disciplines, including physicists, chemists, and material scientists, to foster awareness and cross-disciplinary transfer of ideas in this rapidly evolving field.

 

 

      Registration and Information                                                  Brochure Download

 

 

Week 1
Aug. 7 (Mon.)

Fu-Chun Zhang

KITS, UCAS

Opening Session, Introduction to KITSSlidesVideo

Haibin Yu

HUST

Molecular dynamics simulations of dynamical mechanical spectroscopy in metallic glasses: linear and nonlinear responsesSlidesVideo

Jeppe C. Dyre

Roskilde Univ.

Identifying the material time in physical agingSlidesVideo

Tianhui Zhang

Soochow Univ.

Continuous Structural evolution of nucleation in colloidsSlidesVideo
Aug. 8 (Tue.)

Walter Kob

Univ. of Montpellier

Probing the properties of ideal glassesSlidesVideo

Zhaoping Lv

USTB

Unique glass-glass transition in Pd-based metallic glassesSlidesVideo

Yue Wu

Univ. of North Carolina

Non-Density Driven Liquid-Liquid TransitionSlidesVideo
Aug. 9 (Wed.)

Mingwei Chen

Johns Hopkins Univ.

TBDSlides

Video

Cai-Zhuang Wang

Ames National Lab

Local structure orders in metallic liquids and glasses and their influences on the dynamics of glass and phase selectionsSlidesVideo

Kang Chen

Soochow Univ.

Nonlinear Langevin Equation Theory and its application to colloidal polymer glassSlidesVideo

Jeppe C. Dyre

Roskilde Univ.

Systems with Hidden Scale Invariance: An overview of the isomorph theory. 

Slides1

Slides2

Video
Aug. 10 (Thur.)

Lanhong Dai

IOM, CAS

Towards dilation in flow and fracture of metallic glassesSlidesVideo

Gang Wang

Shanghai Univ.

Discontinuous Deformation Behavior in Metallic GlassesSlidesVideo

Jie Zhang

SJTU

Study of an athermal quasi-static plastic deformation in a 2D granular materialSlidesVideo
Aug. 11 (Fri.)

Yujie Wang

SJTU

Granular packing as model glass formersSlidesVideo

Limei Xu

Peking Univ.

Dynamic crossover and structure correlationSlidesVideo

Maozhi Li

RUC

five-fold local symmetry in metallic liquids and glassesSlidesVideo
Week 2
Aug. 14 (Mon.)

K. L. Ngai

Univ. of Pisa

TBDSlidesVideo

Rafi Blumenfeld

NUDT & Imperial College

Entropy in disordered particulate systemsSlidesVideo

Ke Chen

IOP, CAS

Defects and structural order in colloidal glassesSlidesVideo
Aug. 15 (Tue.)

Yilong Han

HKUST

Making glasses from crystals or vaporsSlidesVideo

Yuren Wang

IOM, CAS

Glass transition in monolayers of colloidal ellipsoidsSlidesVideo

Zexin Zhang

Soochow Univ.

Glassy Dynamics in Two-dimensional MeltingSlidesVideo

Peter Harrowell

Univ. of Sydney

Fast Crystal Growth of Pure Metals from their Melts SlidesVideo
Aug. 16 (Wed.)

Peter Harrowell

Univ. of Sydney

The Occurrence and Consequence of Constraint in Supercooled LiquidsSlidesVideo

Bo Zhang

HFUT

Inter-diffusion and self-diffusion in liquid Ce80Ni20SlidesVideo

Xiaohua Zhang

Soochow Univ.

Glass Transition of Polymer in NanochannelsSlidesVideo

Peng Tan

Fudan Univ.

Complex Structures and Dynamics Resulted from Long-range AnisotropicSlidesVideo
Aug. 17 (Thur.)

Yanhui Liu

IOP, CAS

Discover better metals faster-A case study on metallic glassesSlidesVideo

Zhefang Zhang

IOMR, CAS

Fracture mechanisms and strength theory of metallic glassesSlidesVideo

Corey O’Hern

Yale Univ.

Mechanical properties of glasses: Rearrangement statistics and measures of DuctilitySlidesVideo

Pengfei Guan

CSRC

A Link between Structural Relaxation and Dynamic Heterogeneity in Glass-Forming LiquidsSlidesVideo
Aug. 18 (Fri.)

Xunli Wang

CUHK

Cluster connectivity and medium range orderSlidesVideo

Nicolas Giovambattiste

CUNY

Understanding Water Polymorphism using the Potential Energy Landscape ApproachSlidesVideo

Zhenwei Wu

Peking Univ.

Local connectivity modulates multi-scale relaxation dynamics in a metallic glass-forming systemSlidesVideo

Wei-hua Wang

IOP, CAS

Closing remarksSlidesVideo