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Glass Transition Temperature

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Glass transition temperature



 
 
The Glass transition temperature, Tg, is the temperature at which an amorphous solid
Amorphous solid

An amorphous solid is a solid in which there is no long-range order of the positions of the atoms. . Most classes of solid materials can be found or prepared in an amorphous form....
, such as glass
Glass

Glass generally refers to a Hardness, brittle, transparency amorphous solid, such as that used for windows, many Glass Bottles, or eyewear, including, but not limited to, soda-lime glass, borosilicate glass, acrylic glass, sugar glass, Muscovite , or aluminium oxynitride....
 or a polymer
Polymer

A polymer is a large molecule composed of repeating structural units typically connected by covalent chemical bonds. While polymer in popular usage suggests plastic, the term actually refers to a large class of natural and synthetic materials with a variety of properties....
, becomes brittle on cooling, or soft on heating. More specifically, it defines a pseudo second order phase transition
Phase transition

In thermodynamics, a phase transition is the transformation of a thermodynamic system from one phase to another.At phase-transition point, physical properties may undergo abrupt change- for instance, volume of the two phases may be vastly different....
 in which a supercooled
Supercooling

Supercooling is the process of lowering the temperature of a liquid or a gas below its melting point, without it becoming a solid.A liquid below its standard freezing point will crystallization process in the presence of a nucleation around which a crystal structure can form....
 melt yields, on cooling, a glassy structure
Glass

Glass generally refers to a Hardness, brittle, transparency amorphous solid, such as that used for windows, many Glass Bottles, or eyewear, including, but not limited to, soda-lime glass, borosilicate glass, acrylic glass, sugar glass, Muscovite , or aluminium oxynitride....
 and properties similar to those of crystal
Crystal

A crystal or crystalline solid is a solid material whose constituent atoms, molecules, or ions are arranged in an orderly repeating pattern extending in all three spatial dimensions....
line materials e.g. of an isotropic
Isotropy

Isotropy is uniformity in all directions. Precise definitions depend on the subject area. The word is made up from Greek iso and tropos ....
 solid material. Tg is usually applicable to wholly or partially amorphous solid
Amorphous solid

An amorphous solid is a solid in which there is no long-range order of the positions of the atoms. . Most classes of solid materials can be found or prepared in an amorphous form....
s such as common glass
Glass

Glass generally refers to a Hardness, brittle, transparency amorphous solid, such as that used for windows, many Glass Bottles, or eyewear, including, but not limited to, soda-lime glass, borosilicate glass, acrylic glass, sugar glass, Muscovite , or aluminium oxynitride....
es and plastic
Plastic

Plastic is the general common term for a wide range of synthetic or semisynthetic organic chemistry solid materials suitable for the manufacture of industrial products....
s (organic
Organic compound

An organic compound is any member of a large class of chemical compounds whose molecules contain carbon. For historical reasons discussed below, a few types of compounds such as carbonates, simple oxides of carbon and cyanides, as well as the allotropes of carbon, are considered Inorganic compound....
 polymer
Polymer

A polymer is a large molecule composed of repeating structural units typically connected by covalent chemical bonds. While polymer in popular usage suggests plastic, the term actually refers to a large class of natural and synthetic materials with a variety of properties....
s), although there is an analogous phenomenon in crystalline metals called the ductile-brittle transition temperature.

Below the glass transition temperature, Tg, amorphous solids are in a glassy state and most of their joining bonds are intact.






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The Glass transition temperature, Tg, is the temperature at which an amorphous solid
Amorphous solid

An amorphous solid is a solid in which there is no long-range order of the positions of the atoms. . Most classes of solid materials can be found or prepared in an amorphous form....
, such as glass
Glass

Glass generally refers to a Hardness, brittle, transparency amorphous solid, such as that used for windows, many Glass Bottles, or eyewear, including, but not limited to, soda-lime glass, borosilicate glass, acrylic glass, sugar glass, Muscovite , or aluminium oxynitride....
 or a polymer
Polymer

A polymer is a large molecule composed of repeating structural units typically connected by covalent chemical bonds. While polymer in popular usage suggests plastic, the term actually refers to a large class of natural and synthetic materials with a variety of properties....
, becomes brittle on cooling, or soft on heating. More specifically, it defines a pseudo second order phase transition
Phase transition

In thermodynamics, a phase transition is the transformation of a thermodynamic system from one phase to another.At phase-transition point, physical properties may undergo abrupt change- for instance, volume of the two phases may be vastly different....
 in which a supercooled
Supercooling

Supercooling is the process of lowering the temperature of a liquid or a gas below its melting point, without it becoming a solid.A liquid below its standard freezing point will crystallization process in the presence of a nucleation around which a crystal structure can form....
 melt yields, on cooling, a glassy structure
Glass

Glass generally refers to a Hardness, brittle, transparency amorphous solid, such as that used for windows, many Glass Bottles, or eyewear, including, but not limited to, soda-lime glass, borosilicate glass, acrylic glass, sugar glass, Muscovite , or aluminium oxynitride....
 and properties similar to those of crystal
Crystal

A crystal or crystalline solid is a solid material whose constituent atoms, molecules, or ions are arranged in an orderly repeating pattern extending in all three spatial dimensions....
line materials e.g. of an isotropic
Isotropy

Isotropy is uniformity in all directions. Precise definitions depend on the subject area. The word is made up from Greek iso and tropos ....
 solid material. Tg is usually applicable to wholly or partially amorphous solid
Amorphous solid

An amorphous solid is a solid in which there is no long-range order of the positions of the atoms. . Most classes of solid materials can be found or prepared in an amorphous form....
s such as common glass
Glass

Glass generally refers to a Hardness, brittle, transparency amorphous solid, such as that used for windows, many Glass Bottles, or eyewear, including, but not limited to, soda-lime glass, borosilicate glass, acrylic glass, sugar glass, Muscovite , or aluminium oxynitride....
es and plastic
Plastic

Plastic is the general common term for a wide range of synthetic or semisynthetic organic chemistry solid materials suitable for the manufacture of industrial products....
s (organic
Organic compound

An organic compound is any member of a large class of chemical compounds whose molecules contain carbon. For historical reasons discussed below, a few types of compounds such as carbonates, simple oxides of carbon and cyanides, as well as the allotropes of carbon, are considered Inorganic compound....
 polymer
Polymer

A polymer is a large molecule composed of repeating structural units typically connected by covalent chemical bonds. While polymer in popular usage suggests plastic, the term actually refers to a large class of natural and synthetic materials with a variety of properties....
s), although there is an analogous phenomenon in crystalline metals called the ductile-brittle transition temperature.

Below the glass transition temperature, Tg, amorphous solids are in a glassy state and most of their joining bonds are intact. In inorganic
Inorganic compound

Traditionally, inorganic compounds are considered to be of a mineral, not biological, origin. Complementarily, most organic compounds are traditionally viewed as being of biological origin....
 glasses, with increased temperature more and more joining bonds are broken by thermal fluctuations so that broken bonds (termed configuron
Configuron

According to the nature of the chemical bonds which hold particles together solids can be classified as metals, ionic solids, molecular solids, or covalent network solids....
s) begin to form clusters
Cluster (physics)

In physics, the term clusters denotes small, multiatom particles. As a rule of thumb, any particle of somewhere between 3 and 3*10^7 atoms is considered a cluster....
. Above Tg these clusters become large facilitating the flow of material. In organic polymers, secondary, non-covalent bonds between the polymer chains
Polymer

A polymer is a large molecule composed of repeating structural units typically connected by covalent chemical bonds. While polymer in popular usage suggests plastic, the term actually refers to a large class of natural and synthetic materials with a variety of properties....
 become weak above Tg. Above Tg glasses and organic polymers become soft and capable of plastic deformation without fracture. This behavior is one of the things which make most plastics useful.

It is important to note that the glass transition temperature is a kinetic parameter, and thus parametrically
Parametric model

Definition. A set of probability measures on indexed by a parameter is said to be a parametric model or parametric family if and only if the parameter space is a subset of ....
 depends on the melt cooling rate. Thus the slower the melt cooling rate, the lower Tg. In addition, Tg depends on the measurement conditions, which are not universally defined.

The bond system of an amorphous material changes its Hausdorff dimension
Hausdorff dimension

In mathematics, the Hausdorff dimension is an Extended real number line non-negative real number associated to any metric space. The Hausdorff dimension generalizes the notion of the dimension of a real vector space....
 from Euclidian 3 below Tg (where the amorphous material is solid), to fractal (for example 2.55±0.05 in the case of silica and germania
Germanium dioxide

Germanium dioxide, also called germanium oxide and germania, is an inorganic compound, an oxide of germanium. Its chemical formula is GermaniumOxygen2....
) above Tg, where the amorphous material is liquid.

Time dependency

Consider a molecular liquid which is slowly cooling down. At a certain temperature, the average kinetic energy
Kinetic energy

The kinetic energy of an object is the extra energy which it possesses due to its motion. It is defined as the mechanical work needed to accelerate a body of a given mass from rest to its current velocity....
 of molecules no longer exceeds the binding energy
Binding energy

Binding energy is the mechanical energy required to disassemble a whole into separate parts. A bound system has a lower potential energy than its constituent parts; this is what keeps the system together....
 between neighboring molecules and growth of organized solid crystal begins. Formation of an ordered system takes a certain amount of time since the molecules must move from their current location to energetically preferred points at crystal nodes. As temperature falls, molecular motion slows down further and, if the cooling rate is fast enough, molecules never reach their destination — the substance enters into dynamic arrest and a disordered, glassy solid (or supercooled liquid) forms. In fact, Walter Kauzmann
Walter Kauzmann

Walter Kauzmann was an United States chemist and professor emeritus of Princeton University.He developed the Kauzmann paradox in thermodynamics....
 has argued that if such an arrest did not happen, at still lower temperatures a thermodynamically paradoxical situation
Kauzmann paradox

In thermodynamics, the Kauzmann paradox is the apparent result that it is possible to obtain a supercooling liquid with an entropy lower than that of its corresponding crystal....
 would arise, where the undercooled liquid would have to be denser and of a lower enthalpy
Enthalpy

In thermodynamics and chemistry, the enthalpy is a quotient or description of thermodynamic potential of a system, which can be used to calculate the heat transfer during a quasistatic process taking place in a closed system thermodynamic system under constant pressure....
 than the crystalline phase. Such arrest apparently takes place at certain temperature, which is called the calorimetric ideal glass transition temperature T0c. This means that glass transition is not merely a kinetic
Chemical kinetics

Chemical kinetics, also known as reaction kinetics, is the study of reaction rate of chemical processes. Chemical kinetics includes investigations of how different experimental conditions can influence the speed of a chemical reaction and yield information about the reaction mechanism and transition states, as well as the construction of ma...
 effect, i.e. merely the result of fast cooling of a melt, but there is an underlying thermodynamic basis for glass formation. The glass transition temperature Tg ? T0c as dT/dt ? 0.

A full discussion of Tg requires an understanding of mechanical loss mechanisms (vibrational and resonance modes) of specific (usually common in a given material) functional group
Functional group

In organic chemistry, functional groups are specific groups of atoms within molecules that are responsible for the characteristic chemical reactions of those molecules....
s and molecular arrangements. Factors such as heat treatment
Heat treatment

Heat treatment is a method used to alter the physical property, and sometimes chemical property, properties of a material. The most common application is metallurgy....
 and molecular re-arrangement, vacancies, induced strain
Strain (materials science)

In continuum mechanics, the infinitesimal strain theory, sometimes called small deformation theory, small displacement theory, or small displacement-gradient theory, deals with infinitesimal Deformation s of a Continuum mechanics....
 and other factors affecting the condition of a material may have an effect on Tg ranging from the subtle to the dramatic. Tg is dependent on the viscoelastic
Viscoelasticity

Viscoelasticity is the property of materials that exhibit both Viscosity and Elasticity characteristics when undergoing Deformation. Viscous materials, like honey, resist shear flow and Strain linearly with time when a Stress is applied....
 materials properties, and so varies with rate of applied load. The silicone
Silicone

Silicones are largely inert, man-made compounds with a wide variety of forms and uses. Typically heat-resistant, nonstick, and rubberlike, they are commonly used in cookware, medicine, sealants, adhesives, lubricants, and insulation....
 toy 'Silly Putty
Silly Putty

Silly Putty is the Crayola owned trademark name for a class of silicone polymers known as Bouncing Putty. It is marketed today as a toy for children, but was originally created by accident during research into potential rubber substitutes for use by the United States in World War II....
' is a good example of this: pull slowly and it flows; hit it with a hammer and it shatters.

In contrast to the melting points of crystalline materials the glass transition temperature is therefore somewhat dependent on the time-scale of the imposed change. To some extent time and temperature are interchangeable quantities when dealing with glasses, a fact often expressed in the time-temperature superposition
Time-temperature superposition

The Time-temperature superposition principle is a concept in polymer physics. Glasses, metals, as well as polymers often go through a change of phase which is known as the glass transition....
 principle. An alternative way to discuss the same issue is to say that a glass transition temperature is only truly a point on the temperature scale if the change is imposed at one particular frequency. This is why the ability to modulate the temperature in a DSC
Differential scanning calorimetry

Differential scanning calorimetry or DSC is a thermal analysis technique in which the difference in the amount of heat required to increase the temperature of a sample and reference are measured as a function of temperature....
 experiment has made determining Tg considerably more precise. Since Tg is cooling-rate (or frequency) dependent as the glass is formed, the glass transition is not considered a true thermodynamic
Thermodynamics

In physics, thermodynamics is the study of the conversion of heat energy into different forms of energy ; different energy conversions into heat energy; and its relation to macroscopic variables such as temperature, pressure, and volume....
 phase transition
Phase transition

In thermodynamics, a phase transition is the transformation of a thermodynamic system from one phase to another.At phase-transition point, physical properties may undergo abrupt change- for instance, volume of the two phases may be vastly different....
 by many in the field. They reserve this epithet rather for a transition that is sharp and history-independent.

The IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 1997, 66, 583 defines the glass transition as a second order phase transition
Phase transition

In thermodynamics, a phase transition is the transformation of a thermodynamic system from one phase to another.At phase-transition point, physical properties may undergo abrupt change- for instance, volume of the two phases may be vastly different....
 in which a supercooled melt yields, on cooling, a glassy structure and properties similar to those of crystalline materials e.g. of an isotropic solid material. Phase transitions are associated with the symmetry breaking. The translation-rotation symmetry in the distribution of atoms and molecules is unchanged at the liquid-glass transition, which retains the topological disorder of fluids. Symmetry changes at glass transition can be viewed when considered not for atoms but for bonds. The disordered material changes its symmetry, namely the Hausdorff dimension
Hausdorff dimension

In mathematics, the Hausdorff dimension is an Extended real number line non-negative real number associated to any metric space. The Hausdorff dimension generalizes the notion of the dimension of a real vector space....
 of bonds, from Euclidian 3D below to fractal 2.55±0.05- dimensional above the glass transition temperature.

In polymer
Polymer

A polymer is a large molecule composed of repeating structural units typically connected by covalent chemical bonds. While polymer in popular usage suggests plastic, the term actually refers to a large class of natural and synthetic materials with a variety of properties....
s, Tg is often expressed as the temperature at which the Gibbs free energy
Gibbs free energy

In thermodynamics, the Gibbs free energy is a thermodynamic potential that measures the "useful" or process-initiating Work obtainable from an isothermal, Isobaric process thermodynamic system....
 is such that the activation energy
Activation energy

In chemistry, activation energy is a term introduced in 1889 by the Swedish scientist Svante Arrhenius, that is defined as the energy that must be overcome in order for a chemical reaction to occur....
 for the cooperative movement of 50 or so elements of the polymer is exceeded. This allows molecular chains to slide past each other when a force is applied. From this definition, we can see that the introduction of relatively stiff chemical groups (such as benzene
Benzene

Benzene, or benzol, is an organic compound chemical compound and a known carcinogen with the molecular formula Carbon6Hydrogen6....
 rings) will interfere with the flowing process and hence increase Tg. With thermoplastics, the stiffness of the material will drop due to this effect. This is shown in the figure below. It can be seen that when the glass temperature has been reached, the stiffness stays the same for a while, until the material melts. This region is called the rubber plateau.



Tg can be significantly decreased by addition of plasticisers into the polymer matrix. Smaller molecules of plasticizer embed themselves between the polymer chains, increasing the spacing and free volume, and allowing them to move past one another even at lower temperatures. The "new-car smell
New car smell

New car smell is the common term for the odor that comes from the combination of materials found in new automobiles. Some people regard it as a pleasant and desirable smell....
" is due to the initial outgassing
Outgassing

Outgassing is the slow release of a gas that was trapped, freezing, Absorption or adsorbed in some material....
 of volatile
Volatility (chemistry)

Volatility in the context of chemistry, physics and thermodynamics is a measure of the tendency of a substance to vaporize. It has also been defined as a measure of how readily a substance vaporizes....
 small-molecule plasticizers used to modify interior plastics (e.g., dashboards) to keep them from cracking in the cold, winter weather. The addition of nonreactive side groups
Side chain

A side chain in organic chemistry and biochemistry is a part of a molecule that is attached to a core structure. The placeholder R is often used as a generic placeholder for side chains, the R historically being derived from radical or rest....
 to a polymer can also make the chains stand off from one another, reducing Tg. If a plastic with some desirable properties has a Tg which is too high, it can sometimes be combined with another in a copolymer or composite material
Composite material

Composite materials are engineered materials made from two or more constituent materials with significantly different physical or chemical properties which remain separate and distinct on a macroscopic level within the finished structure....
 with a Tg below the temperature of intended use. Note that some plastics are used at high temperatures, e.g., in automobile engines, and others at low temperatures.

In glass
Glass

Glass generally refers to a Hardness, brittle, transparency amorphous solid, such as that used for windows, many Glass Bottles, or eyewear, including, but not limited to, soda-lime glass, borosilicate glass, acrylic glass, sugar glass, Muscovite , or aluminium oxynitride....
es (including amorphous metal
Amorphous metal

An amorphous metal is a metallic material with a disordered atomic-scale structure. In contrast to most metals, which are crystalline and therefore have a highly ordered arrangement of atoms, amorphous solid alloys are non-crystalline....
s and gel
Gel

A gel is a solid, gelatin material that can have properties ranging from soft and weak to hard and tough. Gels are defined as a substantially dilute crosslinked system, which exhibits no flow when in the steady-state....
s), Tg is related to the energy required to break and re-form covalent bonds in a somewhat less than perfect (may be regarded as an understatement) 3D lattice of covalent bond
Covalent bond

A covalent bond is a form of chemical bonding that is characterized by the sharing of pairs of electrons between atoms, or between atoms and other covalent bonds....
s. The Tg is therefore influenced by the chemistry of the glass. E.g., add B
Boron

Boron is a chemical element with atomic number 5 and the chemical symbol B. Boron is a trivalent metalloid element which occurs abundantly in the evaporite ores borax and ulexite....
, Na
Sodium

Sodium is an element which has the symbol Na , atomic number 11, atomic mass 23 amu , and a common oxidation number +1. Sodium is a soft, silvery white, highly reactive element and is a member of the alkali metals within "group 1" ....
, K
Potassium

Potassium is a chemical element. It has the symbol K , atomic number 19, and atomic mass 39.0983. Potassium was first isolated from potash, hence the name....
 or Ca
Calcium

Calcium is the chemical element with the symbol Ca and atomic number 20. It has an atomic mass of 40.078 amu. Calcium is a soft grey alkaline earth metal, and is the fifth most abundant element by mass in the earth's Crust ....
 to a silica glass, which have a valency less than 4 and they help break up the 3D lattice and reduce the Tg. Add P
Phosphorus

Phosphorus is the chemical element that has the symbol P and atomic number 15. The name comes from the and . A Valency nonmetal of the nitrogen group, phosphorus is commonly found in inorganic phosphate minerals....
 which has a valency of 5 and it helps re-establish the 3D lattice, increasing Tg.

The Space Shuttle Challenger
Space Shuttle Challenger

Space Shuttle Challenger was NASA's second Space Shuttle orbiter to be put into service, Space Shuttle Columbia being the first. Its maiden flight was on April 4, 1983, and it completed nine missions before breaking apart 73 seconds after the launch of its tenth mission, STS-51-L on January 28, 1986, resulting in the death of all seve...
 disaster was caused by rubber O-rings that were below their glass transition temperature on an unusually cold Florida morning, and thus could not flex adequately to form proper seals between sections of the two solid-fuel rocket boosters
Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Booster

The Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Boosters are the pair of large solid rocket booster used by the Space Shuttle during the first two minutes of powered flight....
.

Measurement of Tg for glasses


In contrast to the viscosity
Viscosity

Viscosity is a measure of the Drag of a fluid which is being deformed by either shear stress or extensional stress. In everyday terms , viscosity is "thickness"....
 the thermal expansion
Thermal expansion

Thermal expansion is the tendency of matter to change in volume in response to a change in temperature. When a substance is heated, its constituent particles move around more vigorously and by doing so generally maintain a greater average separation....
, heat capacity, and many other properties of inorganic glass
Glass

Glass generally refers to a Hardness, brittle, transparency amorphous solid, such as that used for windows, many Glass Bottles, or eyewear, including, but not limited to, soda-lime glass, borosilicate glass, acrylic glass, sugar glass, Muscovite , or aluminium oxynitride....
es show a relatively sudden change at the glass transition temperature. This effect is used for measurement by Differential scanning calorimetry
Differential scanning calorimetry

Differential scanning calorimetry or DSC is a thermal analysis technique in which the difference in the amount of heat required to increase the temperature of a sample and reference are measured as a function of temperature....
 (DSC) and dilatometry
Dilatometer

Dilatometers are scientific instruments that measure changes in volume.The most common application of the Dilatometer is for measurement of the thermal expansion....
.

The viscosity at the glass transition temperature depends on the sample preparation (especially the cooling curve), the heating or cooling curve during measurement and the chemical composition. In general, the glass transition temperature is close to the annealing point
Annealing (glass)

Annealing is a process of slowly cooling glass to relieve internal stresses after it was formed. The process may be carried out in a temperature-controlled kiln known as a Lehr ....
 of glasses at 1013 poise
Poise

The poise is the unit of dynamic viscosity in the centimetre gram second system of units. It is named after Jean Louis Marie Poiseuille.The analogous unit in the SI is the pascal second :...
 = 1012 Pa·s. For dilatometric measurements heating rates of 3-5 K/min are common, for DSC measurements 10 K/min, considering that the heating rate during measurement should equal the cooling rate during sample preparation.

Biophysics

Proteins also possess a glass transition temperature
Temperature

In physics, temperature is a physical property of a Physical system that underlies the common notions of hot and cold; something that feels hotter generally has the greater temperature....
 below which both anharmonic motions and long-range correlated motion within a single molecule are quenched. The origin of this transition is primarily due to "caging" by glassy water, but can also be modeled in the absence of explicit water molecules, suggesting that part of the transition is due to internal protein dynamics.

Vitrification
Vitrification

Vitrification is a process of converting a material into a glass-like amorphous solid that is free from any crystalline structure, either by the quick removal or addition of heat, or by mixing with an additive....
 (glass formation below the melting point
Melting point

The melting point of a solid is the temperature range at which it changes states of matter from solid to liquid. At the melting point the solid and liquid phase exist in equilibrium....
) can occur when starting with a liquid such as water
Water

Water is a common chemical substance that is essential for the survival of all known forms of life. In typical usage, water refers only to its liquid form or States of matter, but the substance also has a solid state, ice, and a gaseous state, water vapor or steam....
, usually through very rapid cooling or the introduction of agents that suppress the formation of ice
Ice

Ice is a solid phases of matter, usually crystalline solid, of a non-metallic substance that is liquid or gas at room temperature, such as ammonia ice or methane ice....
 crystals. This is in contrast to ordinary freezing
Freezing

In physical science, freezing or solidification is the process in which a liquid turns into a solid when cold enough. The Melting point is the temperature at which this happens....
 which results in ice crystal formation. Additives used in cryobiology
Cryobiology

Cryobiology is the branch of biology that studies the effects of low temperatures on living things. The word cryobiology is derived from the Greek words "cryo" = cold, "bios" = life, and "logos" = science....
 or produced naturally by organisms living in polar regions are called cryoprotectant
Cryoprotectant

A cryoprotectant is a substance that is used to protect biological tissue from freezing damage . Arctic and Antarctic insects, fish, amphibians and reptiles create cryoprotectants in their bodies to minimize freezing damage during cold winter periods....
s. Vitrification technology is being used to cryopreserve
Cryopreservation

Cryopreservation is a process where cell or whole Biological tissue are preserved by cooling to low sub-zero temperatures, such as 77 K or -196 ?C ....
 cells
Cell (biology)

The cell is the structural and functional unit of all known Life organisms. It is the smallest unit of an organism that is classified as living, and is often called the building bricks of life....
, tissues
Biological tissue

Tissue is a cellular organizational level intermediate between cells and a complete organism. Hence, a tissue is an ensemble of cells, not necessarily identical, but from the same origin, that together carry out a specific function....
 and organs
Organ (anatomy)

In biology, an organ is a biological tissue that performs a specific function or group of functions. Usually there is a main tissue and sporadic tissues....
 for transplantation
Organ transplant

Organ transplant is the moving of an organ from one body to another , for the purpose of replacing the recipient's damaged or failing organ with a working one from the donor site....
.

Glass transition temperature of some materials























PolymerTg (°C)
Polyethylene
Polyethylene

Polyethylene or polythene is a thermoplastic commodity heavily used in consumer products . Over 60 million tons of the material are produced worldwide every year....
 (LDPE)
-105 or -30 also cited
Tyre
Tyre

Tyre is a city in the South Governorate, Lebanon of Lebanon . There were approximately 117,000 inhabitants in 2003, however, the government of Lebanon has released only rough estimates of population numbers since 1932, so an accurate statistical accounting is not possible....
 Rubber
-72
Polypropylene
Polypropylene

Polypropylene or polypropene is a thermoplastic polymer, made by the chemical industry and used in a wide variety of applications, including packaging, textiles , stationery, plastic parts and reusable containers of various types, laboratory equipment, loudspeakers, automotive components, and polymer banknotes....
 (atactic)
-20
Poly(vinyl acetate)
Polyvinyl acetate

Polyvinyl acetate is a rubbery synthetic polymer. PVA is a common copolymer.It is prepared by polymerization of vinyl acetate, also referred to as VAM....
 (PVAc)
28
Polyethylene terephthalate
Polyethylene terephthalate

Polyethylene tephthalate , commonly abbreviated PET, PETE, or the obsolete PETP or PET-P), is a thermoplastic polymer resin of the polyester family and is used in synthetic fibers; beverage, food and other liquid Packaging; thermoforming applications; and engineering resins often in combination with glass fiber....
 (PET)
69
Poly(vinyl alcohol)
Polyvinyl alcohol

Polyvinyl alcohol is a water-soluble synthetic polymer....
 (PVA)
85
Poly(vinyl chloride)
Polyvinyl chloride

Polyvinyl chloride, commonly abbreviated PVC, is the third most widely used thermoplastic polymer after polyethylene and polypropylene....
 (PVC)
82
Polystyrene
Polystyrene

Polystyrene , sometimes abbreviated PS, is an Aromaticity polymer made from the aromatic monomer styrene, a liquid hydrocarbon that is commercially manufactured from petroleum by the chemical industry....
95
Polypropylene
Polypropylene

Polypropylene or polypropene is a thermoplastic polymer, made by the chemical industry and used in a wide variety of applications, including packaging, textiles , stationery, plastic parts and reusable containers of various types, laboratory equipment, loudspeakers, automotive components, and polymer banknotes....
 (isotactic)
0
Poly-3-hydroxybutyrate (PHB
PHB

PHB can refer to several things:* Bachelor of Philosophy degree. In English-speaking countries, a PhB, is often awarded with 'distinction' or 'honors'...
)
15
Poly(methylmethacrylate) (atactic)105
Poly(carbonate)
Polycarbonate

Polycarbonates are a particular group of thermoplastic polymers. They are easily worked, injection moulding, and thermoforming; as such, these plastics are very widely used in the modern chemical industry....
145
Chalcogenide
Chalcogenide

A chalcogenide is a chemical compound consisting of at least one chalcogen ion and at least one more electropositive element. Although all group 16 elements of the periodic table are defined as chalcogens, the term is more commonly reserved for sulfides, selenides, and tellurides, rather than oxides....
 AsGeSeTe
245
ZBLAN
ZBLAN

ZBLAN is a type of fluorozirconate glass that is made of a mixture of zirconium fluoride, barium fluoride, lanthanum fluoride, aluminium fluoride, and sodium fluorides....
235
Tellurite
Tellurite

This article is about the Tellurium compounds. For the similarly named Star Trek race, see Tellarite.Tellurite refers to the mineral composed of tellurium dioxide ....
279
Polynorbornene215
Fluoroaluminate400
Soda-lime glass
Soda-lime glass

Soda-lime glass, also called soda-lime-silica glass, is the most prevalent type of glass, used for windowpanes, and glass containers for beverages, food, and some commodity items....
520-600
Fused quartz
Fused quartz

Fused quartz and fused silica are types of glass containing primarily silica in amorphous solid form. They are manufactured using several different processes....
1175
These are only mean values, as the glass transition temperature depends on the cooling-ratio, molecular weight distribution and could be influenced by additives.

Note also that for a semi-crystalline material such as Polyethylene that is 60-80% crystalline at room temperature the quoted glass transition refers to what happens to the amorphous part of the material as the temperature is dropped

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