The exponential dielectric relaxation dynamics in a secondary alcohol's supercooled liquid and glassy states
Citation:
Kalinovskaya, O.E., Vij, J.K., The exponential dielectric relaxation dynamics in a secondary alcohol's supercooled liquid and glassy states , Journal of Chemical Physics, 112, 7, 2000, 3262 - 3266Download Item:

Abstract:
To gain insight into a recent observation that the prominent, Debye-type relaxation process observed
for a primary alcohol may not be the a-relaxation process associated with molecular diffusion of a
liquid @Europhys. Lett. 40, 549 ~1997!, J. Chem. Phys. 107, 1086 ~1997!#, the dielectric spectra of
an uncrystallizable secondary alcohol, 5-methyl-2-hexanol, has been investigated by broadband
spectroscopy. Measurements made over a temperature range from 110 to 298 K showed that three
relaxation processes occur. Processes I and II have a non-Arrhenius variation of the relaxation rate
with temperature, and process III an Arrhenius. Only process I, the slowest of the three, has a single
relaxation rate, the other two, a broad distribution. The contribution to permittivity from process II
was 0.8, i.e., ;3% of the static permittivity, and from process III, the fastest was 0.1, i.e., ;0.3%.
It is argued that the mechanism of process I is the breaking followed by dipolar reorientation and
reforming of the H-bonds in the intermolecularly H-bonded structure, and process II is that of the
orientation of the other dipolar groups, such as the -OR group. Process III is the usual Johari?
Goldstein process. For 5-methyl-2-hexanol, the mode-coupling and another theory by Souletie and
Bertrand @J. Phys. I 1, 1627 ~1991!# seem to agree with the relaxation rate of processes I and II, and
predict temperatures for 1024 Hz relaxation rate, within a few degrees of that expected.
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/jvijDescription:
PUBLISHED
Author: VIJ, JAGDISH KUMAR
Type of material:
Journal ArticleSeries/Report no:
Journal of Chemical Physics112
7
Availability:
Full text availableKeywords:
Condensed matter physics, dielectric relaxationLicences: