Diane M. Walters
University of Wisconsin-Madison
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Featured researches published by Diane M. Walters.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015
Shakeel S. Dalal; Diane M. Walters; Ivan Lyubimov; Juan J. de Pablo; M. D. Ediger
Significance Glasses are solids that lack the regular order of crystals. Organic glasses, when produced by deposition from the vapor, can exhibit high levels of molecular orientation that improve performance of devices such as organic light-emitting diodes. We show here that molecular orientation in such glasses is primarily controlled by the substrate temperature during deposition, suggesting that the performance of almost any device based upon amorphous organic materials might be systematically optimized by this route. We explain molecular orientation in the glass in terms of the orientation present near the surface of the corresponding liquid. The highly oriented glasses formed here also exhibit high density and improved thermal stability. These features will likely further enhance the performance of organic electronics devices. Physical vapor deposition is commonly used to prepare organic glasses that serve as the active layers in light-emitting diodes, photovoltaics, and other devices. Recent work has shown that orienting the molecules in such organic semiconductors can significantly enhance device performance. We apply a high-throughput characterization scheme to investigate the effect of the substrate temperature (Tsubstrate) on glasses of three organic molecules used as semiconductors. The optical and material properties are evaluated with spectroscopic ellipsometry. We find that molecular orientation in these glasses is continuously tunable and controlled by Tsubstrate/Tg, where Tg is the glass transition temperature. All three molecules can produce highly anisotropic glasses; the dependence of molecular orientation upon substrate temperature is remarkably similar and nearly independent of molecular length. All three compounds form “stable glasses” with high density and thermal stability, and have properties similar to stable glasses prepared from model glass formers. Simulations reproduce the experimental trends and explain molecular orientation in the deposited glasses in terms of the surface properties of the equilibrium liquid. By showing that organic semiconductors form stable glasses, these results provide an avenue for systematic performance optimization of active layers in organic electronics.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015
M. Tylinski; A. Sepúlveda; Diane M. Walters; Y. Z. Chua; Christoph Schick; M. D. Ediger
AC chip nanocalorimetry is used to characterize vapor-deposited glasses of methyl-m-toluate (MMT). Physical vapor deposition can prepare MMT glasses that have lower heat capacity and significantly higher kinetic stability compared to liquid-cooled glasses. When heated, highly stable MMT glasses transform into the supercooled liquid via propagating fronts. We present the first quantitative analysis of the temporal and spatial uniformities of these transformation fronts. The front velocity varies by less than 4% over the duration of the transformation. For films 280 nm thick, the transformation rates at different spatial positions in the film differ by about 25%; this quantity may be related to spatially heterogeneous dynamics in the stable glass. Our characterization of the kinetic stability of MMT stable glasses extends previous dielectric experiments and is in excellent agreement with these results.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2017
Diane M. Walters; Lucas Antony; Juan J. de Pablo; M. D. Ediger
High thermal stability and anisotropic molecular orientation enhance the performance of vapor-deposited organic semiconductors, but controlling these properties is a challenge in amorphous materials. To understand the influence of molecular shape on these properties, vapor-deposited glasses of three disk-shaped molecules were prepared. For all three systems, enhanced thermal stability is observed for glasses prepared over a wide range of substrate temperatures and anisotropic molecular orientation is observed at lower substrate temperatures. For two of the disk-shaped molecules, atomistic simulations of thin films were also performed and anisotropic molecular orientation was observed at the equilibrium liquid surface. We find that the structure and thermal stability of these vapor-deposited glasses results from high surface mobility and partial equilibration toward the structure of the equilibrium liquid surface during the deposition process. For the three molecules studied, molecular shape is a dominant factor in determining the anisotropy of vapor-deposited glasses.
Soft Matter | 2016
Jing Jiang; Diane M. Walters; Dong Zhou; M. D. Ediger
Vapor-deposited glasses can be anisotropic and molecular orientation is important for organic electronics applications. In organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs), for example, the orientation of dye molecules in two-component emitting layers significantly influences emission efficiency. Here we investigate how substrate temperature during vapor deposition influences the orientation of dye molecules in a model two-component system. We determine the average orientation of a linear blue light emitter 1,4-di-[4-(N,N-diphenyl)amino]styryl-benzene (DSA-Ph) in mixtures with aluminum-tris(8-hydroxyquinoline) (Alq3) by spectroscopic ellipsometry and IR dichroism. We find that molecular orientation is controlled by the ratio of the substrate temperature during deposition and the glass transition temperature of the mixture. These findings extend recent results for single component vapor-deposited glasses and suggest that, during vapor deposition, surface mobility allows partial equilibration towards orientations preferred at the free surface of the equilibrium liquid.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015
Diane M. Walters; Ranko Richert; M. D. Ediger
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015
Ivan Lyubimov; Lucas Antony; Diane M. Walters; David Rodney; M. D. Ediger; Juan J. de Pablo
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Diane M. Walters; Noah D. Johnson; M. D. Ediger
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Charles Powell; Jing Jiang; Diane M. Walters; M. D. Ediger
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015
Diane M. Walters; Shakeel S. Dalal; Ivan Lyubimov; Juan J. de Pablo; M. D. Ediger
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015
Diane M. Walters; Ranko Richert; M. D. Ediger