Crystalline Modifications (crystalline + modifications)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


The continuous cooling transformation (CCT) as a flexible tool to investigate polymer crystallization under processing conditions

ADVANCES IN POLYMER TECHNOLOGY, Issue 2 2009
V. Brucato
Abstract An experimental route for investigating polymer crystallization over a wide range of cooling rates (from 0.01 to 1000°C/s) and pressures (from 0.1 to 40 MPa) is illustrated, using a method that recalls the approach adopted in metallurgy for studying structure development in metals. Two types of experimental setup were used, namely an apparatus for fast cooling of thin films (100,200 ,m thick) at various cooling rates under atmospheric pressure and a device (based on a on-purpose modified injection molding machine) for quenching massive samples (about 1,2 cm3) under hydrostatic pressure fields. In both cases, ex situ characterization experiments were carried out to probe the resulting structure, using techniques such as density measurements and wide-angle x-ray diffraction (WAXD) patterns. The cooling mechanism and temperature distribution across the sample thickness were analyzed. Results show that the final structure is determined only by the imposed thermal history and pressure. Experimental results for isotactic polypropylene (iPP), poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET), polyamide 6 (PA6), and syndiotactic polystyrene (sPS) are reported, showing the reliability of this experimental approach to assess not only quantitative information but also a qualitative description of the crystallization behavior of different classes of semicrystalline polymers. The present study gives an opportunity to evaluate how the combined effect of the cooling rate and pressure influences the crystallization kinetics for various classes of polymer of commercial interest. An increase in the cooling rate translates into a decrease in crystallinity and density, which both experience a sudden drop around the specific "crystallizability" (or "critical cooling rate") of the material examined. The exception is sPS where competition among the various crystalline modifications determines a minimum in the plot of density vs. cooling rate. As for the effect of pressure, iPP exhibits a "negative dependence" of crystallization kinetics upon pressure, with a decrease of density and degree of crystallinity with increasing pressure, owing to kinetic constraints. PA6 and PET, on the other hand, due to thermodynamic factors resulting in an increase in Tm with pressure, exhibits a "positive dependence" of crystallization kinetics upon pressure. Finally, recent original results concerning sPS have shown that the minimum in the density vs. cooling rate curve shifts toward larger cooling rates upon increasing pressure. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Adv Polym Techn 28:86,119, 2009; Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com). DOI 10.1002/adv.20151 [source]


Addressing chemical diversity by employing the energy landscape concept

ACTA CRYSTALLOGRAPHICA SECTION A, Issue 5 2010
Martin Jansen
Exploring the structural diversity of a chemical system rests on three pillars. First, there is the global exploration of its energy landscape that allows one to predict which crystalline modifications can exist in a chemical system at a given temperature and pressure. Next, there is the development of new synthesis methods in solid-state chemistry, which require only very low activation energies such that even metastable modifications corresponding, for example, to minima on the landscape surrounded by low barriers can be realized. Finally, there is the theoretical design of optimal synthesis routes, again based on the study of the system's energy landscape. In this paper the energy landscape approach to the prediction of stable and metastable compounds as a function of temperature and pressure is presented, with a particular focus on possible phase transitions. Furthermore, several examples are presented, where such predicted compounds were subsequently successfully synthesized, often employing a newly developed synthesis method, low-temperature atom-beam deposition. [source]


Predicting solid compounds via global exploration of the energy landscape of solids on the ab initio level without recourse to experimental information

PHYSICA STATUS SOLIDI (B) BASIC SOLID STATE PHYSICS, Issue 1 2010
J. Christian Schön
Abstract Predicting which crystalline modifications can exist in a chemical system requires the global exploration of its energy landscape. Due to the large computational effort involved, in the past this search for sufficiently stable minima has been performed employing a variety of empirical potentials and cost functions followed by a local optimization on the ab initio level. However, this might introduce some bias favoring certain types of chemical bonding and entails the risk of overlooking important modifications that are not modeled accurately using empirical potentials. In order to overcome this critical limitation, it is necessary to employ ab initio energy functions during the global optimization phase of the structure prediction. In this paper, we review the current state of the field of structure prediction on the ab initio level. [source]


A Concerted Approach for the Determination of Molecular Conformation in Ordered and Disordered Materials

CHEMISTRY - A EUROPEAN JOURNAL, Issue 22 2007
Jan Sehnert
Abstract We present the successful application of a concerted approach for the investigation of the local environment in ordered and disordered phases in the solid state. In this approach we combined isotope labeling with computational methods and different solid-state NMR techniques. We chose triphenylphosphite (TPP) as an interesting example of our investigations because TPP exhibits two crystalline modifications and two different amorphous phases one of which is highly correlated. In particular we analyzed the conformational distribution in three of these phases. A sample of triply labeled 1-[13C]TPP was prepared and 1D MAS as well as wide-line 13C NMR spectra were measured. Furthermore we acquired 2D 13C wide-line exchange spectra and used this method to derive highly detailed information about the phenyl orientation in the investigated TPP phases. For linkage with a structure model a DFT analysis of the TPP molecule and its immediate environment was carried out. The ab initio calculations of the 13C chemical shift tensor in three- and six-spin systems served as a base for the calculation of 1D and 2D spectra. By comparing these simulations to the experiment an explicit picture of all phases could be drawn on a molecular level. Our results therefore reveal the high potential of the presented approach for detailed studies of the mesoscopic environment even in the challenging case of amorphous materials. [source]