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    Vapor-deposited Organic Glasses Exhibit Enhanced Stability Against Photodegradation

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    Figure 1. Mass loss for a liquid-cooled glass of indomethacin as a function of UV irradiation time..opj (3.078Mb)
    Figure 8. Schematic energy diagram for photodegradation of indomethacin.png (36.55Kb)
    Figure 2. Thickness changes for a vapor-deposited glass of indomethacin during temperature ramping..opj (105.2Kb)
    Figure 3.Mass loss for vapor-deposited and liquid-cooled glasses of indomethacin as a function of irradiation time at 295 K.opj (6.010Mb)
    Figure 4.Mass loss as a result of photodegradation and density of vapor-deposited glasses of indomethacin as a function of substrate temperature during deposition.opj (279.0Kb)
    Figure 5.Mass loss for vapor-deposited and liquid-cooled glasses of indomethacin as a function of irradiation time..opj (3.298Mb)
    Figure 6. Mass loss for vapor-deposited and liquid-cooled glasses of indomethacin as a function of irradiation time..opj (51.75Kb)
    Figure 7.Birefringence measurements for vapor-deposited and liquid-cooled glasses of indomethacin during UV irradiation at 295 K.opj (160.9Kb)
    Date
    2018-03-25
    Author
    Ediger, Mark
    Dalal, Shakeel
    Qiu, Yue
    Publisher
    Soft Matter
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Photochemically stable solids are in demand for applications in organic electronics. Previous work has established the importance of the molecular packing environment by demonstrating that different crystal polymorphs of the same compound react at different rates when illuminated. Here we show, for the first time, that different amorphous packing arrangements of the same compound photodegrade at different rates. For these experiments, we utilize the ability of physical vapor deposition to prepare glasses with an unprecedented range of densities and kinetic stabilities. Indomethacin, a pharmaceutical molecule that can undergo photodecarboxylation when irradiated by UV light, is studied as a model system. Photodegradation is assessed through light-induced changes in the mass of glassy thin films due to the loss of CO2, as measured by a quartz crystal microbalance (QCM). Glasses prepared by physical vapor deposition degraded more slowly under UV illumination than did the liquid-cooled glass, with the difference as large as a factor of 2. Resistance to photodegradation correlated with glass density, with the vapor-deposited glasses being up to 1.3% more dense than the liquid-cooled glass. High density glasses apparently limit the local structural changes required for photodegradation.
    Subject
    photostability, organic glasses
    Permanent Link
    http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/78693
    Related Material/Data
    10.1039/c8sm00183a
    Type
    Dataset
    Citation
    Soft Matter, 2018, 14, 2827
    Part of
    • Ediger Research Group

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