Glasses denser than the supercooled liquid

When aged below the glass transition temperature, Tg , the density of a glass cannot exceed that of the metastable super-cooled liquid (SCL) state, unless crystals are nucleated. The only exception is when another polyamorphic SCL state exists, with a density higher than that of the ordinary SCL. Ex...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2021-08, Vol.118 (31), p.1-7, Article 2100738118
Hauptverfasser: Jin, Yi, Zhanga, Aixi, Wolf, Sarah E., Govind, Shivajee, Moore, Alex R., Zhernenkov, Mikhail, Freychet, Guillaume, Shamsabadi, Ahmad Arabi, Fakhraai, Zahra
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:When aged below the glass transition temperature, Tg , the density of a glass cannot exceed that of the metastable super-cooled liquid (SCL) state, unless crystals are nucleated. The only exception is when another polyamorphic SCL state exists, with a density higher than that of the ordinary SCL. Experimentally, such polyamorphic states and their corresponding liquid–liquid phase transitions have only been observed in network-forming systems or those with polymorphic crystalline states. In otherwise simple liquids, such phase transitions have not been observed, either in aged or vapor-deposited stable glasses, even near the Kauzmann temperature. Here, we report that the density of thin vapor-deposited films of N,N′-bis(3-methylphenyl)-N,N′-diphenylbenzidine (TPD) can exceed their corresponding SCL density by as much as 3.5% and can even exceed the crystal density under certain deposition conditions. We identify a previously unidentified high-density supercooled liquid (HD-SCL) phase with a liquid–liquid phase transition temperature (TLL ) ∼35 K below the nominal glass transition temperature of the ordinary SCL. The HD-SCL state is observed in glasses deposited in the thickness range of 25 to 55 nm, where thin films of the ordinary SCL have exceptionally enhanced surface mobility with large mobility gradients. The enhanced mobility enables vapor-deposited thin films to overcome kinetic barriers for relaxation and access the HD-SCL state. The HD-SCL state is only thermodynamically favored in thin films and transforms rapidly to the ordinary SCL when the vapor deposition is continued to form films with thicknesses more than 60 nm.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2100738118