3 research outputs found
Debye relaxation and 250 K anomaly in glass forming monohydroxy alcohols
A previous dielectric, near-infrared (NIR), and nuclear magnetic resonance
study on the hydrogen-bonded liquid 2-ethyl-1-hexanol [C. Gainaru et al., Phys.
Rev. Lett. 107, 118304 (2011)] revealed anomalous behavior in various static
quantities near 250 K. To check whether corresponding observations can be made
for other monohydroxy alcohols as well, these experimental methods were applied
to such substances with 5, 6, 7, 8, and 10 carbon atoms in their molecular
backbone. All studied liquids exhibit a change of behavior near 250 K which is
tentatively ascribed to effects of hydrogen bond cooperativity. By analyzing
the NIR band intensities, a linear cluster size is derived that agrees with
estimates from dielectric spectroscopy. All studied alcohols, except
4-methyl-3-heptanol, display a dominant Debye-like peak. Furthermore, neat
2-ethyl-1-butanol exhibits a well resolved structural relaxation in its
dielectric loss spectrum which so far has only been observed for diluted
monohydroxy alcohols.Comment: 39 pages including 12 figure