Litcius/Paper detail

Physical vapor deposition of a polyamorphic system: Triphenyl phosphite

M. S. Beasley, B. J. Kasting, M. E. Tracy, Anthony Guiseppi‐Elie, Ranko Richert, M. D. Ediger

2020The Journal of Chemical Physics12 citationsDOI

Abstract

In situ AC nanocalorimetry and dielectric spectroscopy were used to analyze films of vapor-deposited triphenyl phosphite. The goal of this work was to investigate the properties of vapor-deposited glasses of this known polyamorphic system and to determine which liquid is formed when the glass is heated. We find that triphenyl phosphite forms a kinetically stable glass when prepared at substrate temperatures of 0.75–0.95Tg, where Tg is the glass transition temperature. Regardless of the substrate temperature utilized during deposition of triphenyl phosphite, heating a vapor-deposited glass always forms the ordinary supercooled liquid (liquid 1). The identity of liquid 1 was confirmed by both the calorimetric signal and the shape and position of the dielectric spectra. For the purposes of comparison, the glacial phase of triphenyl phosphite (liquid 2) was prepared by the conventional method of annealing liquid 1. We speculate that these new results and previous work on vapor deposition of other polyamorphic systems can be explained by the free surface structure being similar to one polyamorph even in a temperature regime where the other polyamorph is more thermodynamically stable in the bulk.

Topics & Concepts

Triphenyl phosphiteSupercoolingGlass transitionDielectricChemical vapor depositionAnnealing (glass)Materials scienceChemistryChemical engineeringAnalytical Chemistry (journal)Organic chemistryThermodynamicsComposite materialPolymerPhysicsOptoelectronicsEngineeringMaterial Dynamics and PropertiesIonic liquids properties and applicationsGlass properties and applications