Abstract

Triphenyl phosphite (TPP) is now well known to exhibit an intriguing transformation of the supercooled liquid. The transformation was firstly interpreted as a first-order polyamorphic transition between the supercooled liquid and an apparently amorphous state different from the glass and the ordinary liquid, the so-called glacial state. In this paper, we describe and analyze, from experimental investigations (Raman spectroscopy, calorimetric measurements, X-ray and neutron diffraction), the transformation into the glacial state and the structural organization of this state. The latter is interpreted as a heavily nucleated state composed of nanocrystals of the stable crystalline phase embedded in the matrix of non-transformed supercooled liquid. The origin of the intriguing relative stability of this state could result in the combination of two phenomena: the time lag required to attain steady-state values of the nucleation rate (connected to the high viscosity of TPP), and a high nucleation rate in the temperature range where the growth rate is low. These results converge into a description of the glacial state as a mixed supercooled liquid/crystallites state, and then contradict recent claims that the glacial state of TPP is a homogeneous amorphous phase.

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