Diffusion in a metallic melt at the critical temperature of mode coupling theory

Phys Rev Lett. 2003 May 16;90(19):195502. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.90.195502. Epub 2003 May 13.

Abstract

According to mode coupling theory, liquidlike motion becomes frozen at a critical temperature T(c) well above the caloric glass transition temperature T(g). Here, for the first time, we report on radiotracer diffusion in a supercooled Pd43Cu27Ni10P20 alloy from T(g) to the equilibrium melt. Liquidlike motion is seen to set in exactly above T(c) as evidenced by a gradual drop of the effective activation energy. This strongly supports the mode coupling scenario. Isotope effect measurements, which have never been carried out near T(c) in any material, show atomic transport up to the equilibrium melt to be far away from the hydrodynamic regime of uncorrelated binary collisions.