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Solid-to-Solid Crystallization of Organic Thin Films: Classical and Nonclassical Pathways
Author(s) -
Zhixian Wei,
Jihui Fan,
Chenghu Dai,
Zhiyong Pang,
Shenghao Han
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
acs omega
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.779
H-Index - 40
ISSN - 2470-1343
DOI - 10.1021/acsomega.8b00153
Subject(s) - nucleation , crystallization , materials science , crystal growth , annealing (glass) , particle (ecology) , chemical physics , chemical engineering , thin film , nanorod , particle size , nanotechnology , crystallography , chemistry , organic chemistry , composite material , oceanography , engineering , geology
The solid-to-solid crystallization processes of organic molecules have been poorly understood in view of the complexity and the instability of organic crystals. Here, we studied the crystallization of a π-conjugated small molecular semiconductor, bis-(8-hydroxyquinoline) copper (CuQ 2 ), by annealing the thin films at different temperatures. We observed a classical film-to-nanorods crystallization at 80 °C, a coexistence of classical and nonclassical nucleation and particle growth at 120 °C, and a nonclassical crystal growth at 150 °C. We found that the growth of the crystals followed the following processes: particle nucleation, particle growth, particle migration, nondirectional particle attachment, and structure reconstruction. We notice that the growth of CuQ 2 particles follows an outside-to-inside process. More interestingly, our experiments suggest that the submicron CuQ 2 particles are able to migrate dozens of micrometers at 150 °C.

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