
This photo-illustration depicts glass as it appears when it is heated nearly to the "glass transition temperature," when it is simultaneously composed of fluid, flowing regions and solid-like, rigid domains. Image credit: Courtesy of Kevin Kubarych and Matthew Ross
Glass is one of civilization’s most valuable and versatile materials. To scientists, it’s also one of the most intriguing, because it displays properties of both solids and liquids.
Glass is a non-crystalline solid that transforms into a liquid when it’s heated to the so-called glass-transition temperature. When glass approaches this critical temperature--which is between 970 to 1,100 degrees Fahrenheit for the most common type of glass--it is simultaneously composed of fluid, flowing regions and solid-like, rigid domains.
For decades, scientists have been trying to understand exactly how glass behaves, at the molecular level, as it approaches the transition temperature. Now a research group led by University of Michigan chemist Kevin J. Kubarych has applied ultrafast spectroscopy to observe the fastest molecular motions of a liquid hovering just above its glass transition temperature.













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