A method for the high-throughput preparation and characterization of vapor-deposited organic glasses is presented. Depositing directly onto a substrate with a large temperature gradient allows many different glasses to be prepared simultaneously. Ellipsometry is used to characterize these glasses, allowing the determination of density, birefringence, and kinetic stability as a function of substrate temperature. For indomethacin, a model glass former, materials up to 1.4% more dense than the liquid-cooled glass can be formed with a continuously tunable range of molecular orientations as determined by the birefringence. By comparing measurements of many properties, we observe three phenomenological temperature regimes. For substrate temperatures from T g + 11 K to Tg - 8 K, equilibrium states are produced. Between Tg - 8 K and Tg - 31 K, the vapor-deposited materials have the macroscopic properties expected for the equilibrium supercooled liquid while showing local structural anisotropy. At lower substrate temperatures, the properties of the vapor-deposited glasses are strongly influenced by kinetic factors. Different macroscopic properties are no longer correlated with each other in this regime, allowing unusual combinations of properties. © 2013 American Chemical Society.
CITATION STYLE
Dalal, S. S., Fakhraai, Z., & Ediger, M. D. (2013). High-throughput ellipsometric characterization of vapor-deposited indomethacin glasses. Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 117(49), 15415–15425. https://doi.org/10.1021/jp405005n
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