Fast crystallization below the glass transition temperature in hyperquenched systems

Author:

Lucas Pierre1ORCID,Takeda Wataru1ORCID,Pries Julian2ORCID,Benke-Jacob Julia2,Wuttig Matthias23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Arizona 1 , Tucson, Arizona 85712, USA

2. Institute of Physics IA, RWTH Aachen University 2 , 52074 Aachen, Germany

3. Peter Grünberg Institute (PGI 10) 3 , Forschungszentrum Jülich, 52428 Jülich, Germany

Abstract

Many phase change materials (PCMs) are found to crystallize without exhibiting a glass transition endotherm upon reheating. In this paper, we review experimental evidence revealing that these PCMs and likely other hyperquenched molecular and metallic systems can crystallize from the glassy state when reheated at a standard rate. Among these evidences, PCMs annealed below the glass transition temperature Tg exhibit slower crystallization kinetics despite an increase in the number of sub-critical nuclei that should promote the crystallization speed. Flash calorimetry uncovers the glass transition endotherm hidden by crystallization and reveals a distinct change in kinetics when crystallization switches from the glassy to the supercooled liquid state. The resulting Tg value also rationalizes the presence of the pre-Tg relaxation exotherm ubiquitous of hyperquenched systems. Finally, the shift in crystallization temperature during annealing exhibits a non-exponential decay that is characteristic of structural relaxation in the glass. Modeling using a modified Turnbull equation for nucleation rate supports the existence of sub-Tg fast crystallization and emphasizes the benefit of a fragile-to-strong transition for PCM applications due to a reduction in crystallization at low temperature (improved data retention) and increasing its speed at high temperature (faster computing).

Funder

US National Science Foundation

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Subject

Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,General Physics and Astronomy

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