Alessio Zaccone, Eugene M. Terentjev
The mechanical response of solids depends on temperature because the way atoms and molecules respond collectively to deformation is affected at various levels by thermal motion. This is a fundamental problem of solid state science and plays a crucial role in metallurgy, aerospace engineering, energy. In glasses the vanishing of rigidity upon increasing temperature is the reverse process of the glass transition. It remains poorly understood due to the disorder leading to nontrivial (nonaffine) components in the atomic displacements. Our theory explains the basic mechanism of the melting transition of amorphous (disordered) solids in terms of the lattice energy lost to this nonaffine motion, compared to which thermal vibrations turn out to play only a negligible role. It predicts the square-root vanishing of the shear modulus $G\sim\sqrt{T_{c}-T}$ at criticality observed in the most recent numerical simulation study. The theory is also in good agreement with classic data on melting of amorphous polymers (for which no alternative theory can be found in the literature) and offers new opportunities in materials science.
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http://arxiv.org/abs/1212.2020
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