April 1, 2000
Journal Article

The Effect of Underlying Substrate on the Crystallization Kinetics of Dense Amorphous Solid Water Films

Abstract

The crystallization kinetics of thin, dense amorphous solid water films deposited on crystalline ice and Pt(111) substrates are investigated. A dramatic acceleration of the crystallization rate is observed for amorphous films on crystalline ice substrates. The acceleration originates from the absence of the nucleation process on the crystalline ice substrate which serves as a 2-dimensional nucleus for the growth of the crystalline phase. This contrasts with the crystallization on a Pt(111) substrate which proceeds via bulk nucleation and 3-dimensional growth. Activation energies for growth and nucleation are determined to be 56 and 140 kJ/mol, respectively using the apparent activation energies measured on crystalline ice and Pt(111) substrates. For amorphous films deposited on crystalline ice substrates, the crystallization rate decreases rapidly with increasing distance from the crystalline ice substrate most probably due to crystallization induced cracking of the films.

Revised: August 30, 2007 | Published: April 1, 2000

Citation

Dohnalek Z., G.A. Kimmel, R.L. Ciolli, K.P. Stevenson, R.S. Smith, and B.D. Kay. 2000. The Effect of Underlying Substrate on the Crystallization Kinetics of Dense Amorphous Solid Water Films. Journal of Chemical Physics 112, no. 13:5932-5941. PNNL-SA-32228.