Microscopic Observation of Interface-Induced Crystallization via Prefreezing from Polymers Melts
· Invited
Abstract
The microscopic ordering process that a liquid undergoes during crystallization is often initiated at an interface to a solid. Different processes have been suggested by theory to occur at this interface. Of special interest is prefreezing - the formation of a thin crystalline layer at the interface already at temperatures above the melting temperature. Because of the difficult accessibility of the buried interface, experimental proof of crystallization by prefreezing has been elusive in molecular systems. We here present in situ AFM-observations of such a process in two polymeric model systems and show that prefreezing is a first-order prewetting transition. A quantitative description of the phenomena is possible with a phenomenological theory. The results not only contribute to our fundamental understanding of crystallization but might also be useful for the preparation of well-ordered oriented thin films of crystalline organic materials.
References
1. A.-K. Löhmann, T. Henze, T. Thurn-Albrecht,
Direct observation of prefreezing at the melt-solid in polymer crystallization
PNAS, 111, 17368-17372 (2014)
2. A.-K. Flieger, M. Schulz, T. Thurn-Albrecht,
Interface-Induced Crystallization of Polycaprolactone on Graphite via First-Order Prewetting of the Crystalline Phase
Macromolecules 51, 189-194 (2018)
*We acknowledge funding by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft SFB TRR 102.
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Presenters
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Thomas Thurn-Albrecht
- Institute of Physics, Martin-Luther University Halle-Wittenberg