Timetemperature
Time-temperature, sometimes written time–temperature, is a concept describing how temperature and time jointly influence the rate and extent of processes in physical, chemical, and biological systems. Temperature changes alter kinetic barriers and mobilities, so higher temperatures typically accelerate reactions, diffusion, phase transitions, and aging. This coupling is central to predicting material performance, product shelf life, and failure times.
In materials science, a principal framework is the time-temperature superposition principle (TTSP). For many polymers and
Shift factors are commonly described by the Williams-Landel-Ferry equation near the glass transition: log10(a_T) = -C1 (T
Applications of timetemperature include predicting long-term polymer creep and relaxation, documenting shelf life and microbial or