AVS 49th International Symposium
    Electrochemistry and Fluid-Solid Interfaces Monday Sessions
       Session EC+SS-MoA

Paper EC+SS-MoA8
Creating Beakers without Walls: Formation of Deeply-Supercooled Binary Liquid Solutions from Nanoscale Amorphous Solid Films

Monday, November 4, 2002, 4:20 pm, Room C-104

Session: Liquid-Solid Interfaces & Nanoscale Electrochemistry
Presenter: B.D. Kay, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Authors: P. Ayotte, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
R.S. Smith, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
G. Teeter, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Z. Dohnálek, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
G.A. Kimmel, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
B.D. Kay, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Correspondent: Click to Email

Supercooled liquids are metastable and their lifetimes are dictated by the kinetics for crystallization. Traditional experimental studies have used a variety of methods to suppress crystallization while cooling from the liquid phase. An alternate approach is to heat an amorphous solid above its glass transition temperature, T@sub g@, whereupon it transforms into a deeply-supercooled liquid prior to crystallization. We employ molecular beams, programmed desorption (both TPD and isothermal) and FTIR vibrati onal spectroscopy to synthesize and characterize compositionally tailored nanoscale films of glassy methanol and ethanol. We demonstrate that these films exhibit complete diffusive intermixing and suppressed crystallization when heated above T@sub g@. Fu rthermore, the resulting container-less liquids evaporate as continuously mixed ideal binary solutions while retaining their solid-like macroscopic shapes. This approach provides a new method for preparing deeply-supercooled liquid solutions in metastabl e regions of their phase diagram and for studying the kinetics of their phase separation and crystallization as they approach thermodynamic equilibrium. The applicability of this technique for studying aqueous liquid solutions will also be presented and discussed. P. A. is an NSERC Postdoctoral Fellow. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory is a multiprogram National Laboratory operated for the U. S. Department of Energy by Battelle Memorial Institute under contract DE-AC06-76RLO 1830.