Hey guys,
I'm a little delayed in posting my latest results, apologies. But, nonetheless I present a much better summary.
This last time I had 4 different materials to test, which I broke into 8 samples (n=2 for all 4 samples), run under different conditions.
For the summaries, I know how important it is to know how everything was done and how it began etc., so I have the physical description of the samples, their weights, heating parameters, and summary alongside the DSC graphs.
The samples:
All were crystalline. The first 4 came from the same source, the 2nd set being the first couple pulls of heptane after DCM extraction, the 1st set being the later pulls. Those crystals (Samples 1-2) weren't dried and it shows in the thermograms. Their counterparts, 3-4, were dried.
And then the interesting thing was, I had this .. problem where over a year ago I provoked the material I was working with to become utterly insoluble in everything I was working with at the time (even toluene). It turned into this dark brown amorphous wet product which after time hardened. Finally was able to convert it into crystals which were very different . Samples 5-6 represent nice crystals which came out of the re-x after solubilization. These looked normal and had the same MP as the others. Samples 7-8 represent spherulites, (I call them that because of the way they look but maybe that's not technically true?), which work like: the heptane pull will evaporate into a yellow oily mass which is stable for several days. Then, a circular flat crystal will appear, and then another will nucleate the next day, and these expand in all directions eventually merging with the other growing crystals and you can see the interaction patterns in the final form.. These had a MP ~3C lower than average (69.282, n=14, RSD=0.76), with much less enthalpy than usual.
And then, this time for the thermal parameters,
I went to 80C instead of 100C to limit superheating, and then went either back down to 20C or only 40C. My thinking for the latter was maybe there'd be a better memory of the previous crystals, idk. The cooling rates went down to 1C or 0.5C.
A couple of times I quenched it from 80C by supercooling to -30 at 40C in order to get a Tg.
Brief summary:
No double melting points this time, but I did get some exothermic events finally.
The first 2 samples didn't have any 2o thermal events, probably because they weren't fully dried (?).
Samples 3-4: Interesting. Sample 3 was the most intriguing of all. The cooling rate was 0.5, the reheat was 0.5. The exothermic event on cooling actually peaked when the temperature started to heat up again, at ~20C. The crystallization continued coldly with a peak in the 30s. Sample 4 was cooled at a rate of 1C/min to 40C, but didn't have these events. Seems the kinetics are super slow, next time I'll have to try a rate of 0.1 and see if the process occurs at a higher temperature. Further, the endothermic peak afterwards was huge, with enthalpy of 41 J/g. Usually they are ~5 J/g or less if I remember. And, what stands out too is the purity of this 2nd melting peak matched the starting purity. In all the samples in this post the re-melting peaks were extremely pure (99.95%). This wasn't the case here. The MP was 56. Like the spherulites, this represents a lower MP than is seen when melting for the first time, which is usually 59.09 (n=3). Why the melting peaks are a bit lower in these cases vs. the starting MPs is curious.
Samples 5-6 both gave melting peaks on reheat, with MP of ~45 for both (Average MP for the low-melting form: 45.89, n=5)
No additional events from the Spherulites
I'll attach the summary slides, the PDF has a few more slides, showing the full DSC graph for the quench cooled sample instead of the closeups, and a more close up look at that 3rd sample.
Ah, when looking at the results, when I say samples 1-8 here I mean 1A,1B, ..., 4B as 1-8.
Next time I will definitely have to do significantly slower cooling and reheating rate.
I'm trying to be mindful of the length of this post, but I found some great articles that seem to be good in helping understand what's going on. Just found them so haven't looked too much but like I was saying to downwardsfromzero, this idea of "cross-nucleation" of polymorphs seems to be a feature here, as well as "concomitant polymorphism".
Anyways, enjoy