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Influence of Hydrogen Bonding on the Surface Diffusion of Molecular Glasses: Comparison of Three Triazines
Author(s) -
Yinshan Chen,
Men Zhu,
Audrey Laventure,
Olivier Lebel,
M. D. Ediger,
Lian Yu
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry b
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.864
H-Index - 392
eISSN - 1520-6106
pISSN - 1520-5207
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpcb.7b05333
Subject(s) - intermolecular force , hydrogen bond , diffusion , molecule , chemistry , chemical physics , surface diffusion , molecular dynamics , glass transition , molecular diffusion , materials science , crystallography , computational chemistry , thermodynamics , organic chemistry , polymer , adsorption , physics , metric (unit) , operations management , economics
Surface grating decay measurements have been performed on three closely related molecular glasses to study the effect of intermolecular hydrogen bonds on surface diffusion. The three molecules are derivatives of bis(3,5-dimethyl-phenylamino)-1,3,5-triazine and differ only in the functional group R at the 2-position, with R being C 2 H 5 , OCH 3 , and NHCH 3 , and referred to as "Et", "OMe", and "NHMe", respectively. Of the three molecules, NHMe forms more extensive intermolecular hydrogen bonds than Et and OMe and was found to have slower surface diffusion. For Et and OMe, surface diffusion is so fast that it replaces viscous flow as the mechanism of surface grating decay as temperature is lowered. In contrast, no such transition was observed for NHMe under the same conditions, indicating significantly slower surface diffusion. This result is consistent with the previous finding that extensive intermolecular hydrogen bonds slow down surface diffusion in molecular glasses and is attributed to the persistence of hydrogen bonds even in the surface environment. This result is also consistent with the lower stability of the vapor-deposited glass of NHMe relative to those of Et and OMe and supports the view that surface mobility controls the stability of vapor-deposited glasses.

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