Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
672937 Thermochimica Acta 2015 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Study of ultra-fast DSC applied to the crystallization of glass-forming liquids.•Numerical modeling of DSC traces at heating rates exceeding 10 orders of magnitude.•Identification of three regimes in Kissinger plots.•Elucidation of the effect of liquid fragility on the Kissinger method.•Modeling to study the regime in which crystal growth is thermodynamically limited.

Numerical simulation of DSC traces is used to study the validity and limitations of the Kissinger method for determining the temperature dependence of the crystal-growth rate on continuous heating of glasses from the glass transition to the melting temperature. A particular interest is to use the wide range of heating rates accessible with ultra-fast DSC to study systems such as the chalcogenide Ge2Sb2Te5 for which fast crystallization is of practical interest in phase-change memory. Kissinger plots are found to show three regimes: (i) at low heating rates the plot is straight, (ii) at medium heating rates the plot is curved as expected from the liquid fragility, and (iii) at the highest heating rates the crystallization rate is thermodynamically limited, and the plot has curvature of the opposite sign. The relative importance of these regimes is identified for different glass-forming systems, considered in terms of the liquid fragility and the reduced glass-transition temperature. The extraction of quantitative information on fundamental crystallization kinetics from Kissinger plots is discussed.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
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