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    Origin of Anisotropic Molecular Packing in Vapor-Deposited Alq3 Glasses

    Thumbnail
    File(s)
    Figure 2 sigmaplot file (data and figure) (5.448Mb)
    Figure 3 sigmaplot file (data and figure) (139.5Kb)
    Figure 4 sigmaplot file (data and figure) (87Kb)
    GIWAXS data. Tsub=240K, deposition rate=2 A/s. Incidence angle=0.14, time=180s. (538.3Kb)
    GIWAXS data. Tsub=280K, deposition rate=2 A/s. Incidence angle=0.14, time=180s. (533.4Kb)
    GIWAXS data. Tsub=390K, deposition rate=2 A/s. Incidence angle=0.14, time=180s. (600.1Kb)
    GIWAXS data. Tsub=405K, deposition rate=2 A/s. Incidence angle=0.14, time=180s. (516.9Kb)
    GIWAXS data. Tsub=360K, deposition rate=2 A/s. Incidence angle=0.14, time=180s. (485.5Kb)
    GIWAXS data. Spincoatted Alq3. Incidence angle=0.14, time=180s. (560.4Kb)
    Tiff file of a glass deposited at 280K (18.00Mb)
    Tiff file of a glass deposited at 360K (18.00Mb)
    Raw Psi and Delta data (34.81Kb)
    Date
    2018-12-24
    Author
    Bagchi, Kushal
    Jackson, Nicholas E.
    Gujral, Ankit
    Huang, Chengbin
    Toney, Michael F.
    Yu, Lian
    de Pablo, Juan J.
    Ediger, M. D.
    Publisher
    American Chemical Society
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Anisotropic molecular packing is a key feature that makes glasses prepared by physical vapor deposition (PVD) unique materials, warranting a mechanistic understanding of how a PVD glass attains its structure. To this end, we use X-ray scattering and ellipsometry to characterize the structure of PVD glasses of tris(8-hydroxyquinoline) aluminum (Alq3), a molecule used in organic electronics, and compare our results to simulations of its supercooled liquid. X-ray scattering reveals a tendency for molecular layering in Alq3 glasses that depends upon the substrate temperature during deposition and the deposition rate. Simulations reveal that the Alq3 supercooled liquid, like liquid metals, exhibits surface layering. We propose that the layering in Alq3 glasses observed here as well as the previously reported bulk dipole orientation are inherited from the surface structure of the supercooled liquid. This work significantly advances our understanding of the mechanism governing the formation of anisotropic structure in PVD glasses.
    Permanent Link
    http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/79047
    Related Material/Data
    10.1021/acs.jpclett.8b03582
    Type
    Dataset
    Citation
    J. Phys. Chem. Lett., 2019, 10 (2), pp 164–170
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    • Ediger Research Group

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