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Birefringent Stable Glass with Predominantly Isotropic Molecular Orientation
37
Citations
66
References
2017
Year
Optical MaterialsEngineeringGlass-forming LiquidIntrinsic BirefringenceOptical GlassGlass MaterialStable GlassesChemistryGlass TransitionOptical PropertiesFunctional GlassBirefringent Stable GlassBiophysicsMaterials SciencePhotonicsAnthracene MoleculesCrystallographyPolymer ScienceApplied Physics
Birefringence in stable glasses produced by physical vapor deposition often implies molecular alignment similar to liquid crystals. As such, it remains unclear whether these glasses share the same energy landscape as liquid-quenched glasses that have been aged for millions of years. Here, we produce stable glasses of 9-(3,5-di(naphthalen-1-yl)phenyl)anthracene molecules that retain three-dimensional shapes and do not preferentially align in a specific direction. Using a combination of angle- and polarization-dependent photoluminescence and ellipsometry experiments, we show that these stable glasses possess a predominantly isotropic molecular orientation while being optically birefringent. The intrinsic birefringence strongly correlates with increased density, showing that molecular ordering is not required to produce stable glasses or optical birefringence, and provides important insights into the process of stable glass formation via surface-mediated equilibration. To our knowledge, such novel amorphous packing has never been reported in the past.
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