26 research outputs found

    2H and 13C NMR studies on the temperature-dependent water and protein dynamics in hydrated elastin, myoglobin and collagen

    Full text link
    2H NMR spin-lattice relaxation and line-shape analyses are performed to study the temperature-dependent dynamics of water in the hydration shells of myoglobin, elastin, and collagen

    2H NMR Study of the Water Dynamics in Hydrated Myoglobin

    No full text

    Two glass transitions and secondary relaxations of methyltetrahydrofuran in a binary mixture

    No full text
    We investigate the molecular dynamics in the binary glass forming system methyltetrahydrofuran (M-THF) and tristyrene. Although the components are miscible in the full concentration and temperature range, two glass transitions can clearly be distinguished in differential scanning calorimetry. We selectively probe the reorientational dynamics of M-THF and tristyrene by means of dielectric spectroscopy and depolarized dynamic light scattering, respectively. While, apart from the observed plasticizer effect, the motion of the larger molecules remains almost unchanged, it is shown that the smaller M-THF molecules take part in both glass transitions. Moreover,,below the upper T-g of the mixture, the remaining mobile M-THF molecules clearly show confinement effects in their relaxation behavior. In order to elucidate the nature of the observed secondary relaxation processes, we first characterize the influence of the methyl group of M-THF on the dynamics in the mixtures by comparing the results obtained so far with the relaxation behavior observed in blends of THF and tristyrene. Finally, we employ H-2 NMR spectroscopy to clarify the nature of the secondary relaxations of THF-d(8) in the latter mixtures and conclude on the basis of the NMR and dielectric results that the high-frequency wing observed in neat M-THF appears as a genuine Johari-Goldstein beta-relaxation in the mixtures, whereas the faster secondary process is due to internal degrees of freedom of the nonrigid THF ring

    Two Glass Transitions and Secondary Relaxations of Methyltetrahydrofuran in a Binary Mixture

    No full text
    We investigate the molecular dynamics in the binary glass forming system methyltetrahydrofuran (M-THF) and tristyrene. Although the components are miscible in the full concentration and temperature range, two glass transitions can clearly be distinguished in differential scanning calorimetry. We selectively probe the reorientational dynamics of M-THF and tristyrene by means of dielectric spectroscopy and depolarized dynamic light scattering, respectively. While, apart from the observed plasticizer effect, the motion of the larger molecules remains almost unchanged, it is shown that the smaller M-THF molecules take part in both glass transitions. Moreover,,below the upper T-g of the mixture, the remaining mobile M-THF molecules clearly show confinement effects in their relaxation behavior. In order to elucidate the nature of the observed secondary relaxation processes, we first characterize the influence of the methyl group of M-THF on the dynamics in the mixtures by comparing the results obtained so far with the relaxation behavior observed in blends of THF and tristyrene. Finally, we employ H-2 NMR spectroscopy to clarify the nature of the secondary relaxations of THF-d(8) in the latter mixtures and conclude on the basis of the NMR and dielectric results that the high-frequency wing observed in neat M-THF appears as a genuine Johari-Goldstein beta-relaxation in the mixtures, whereas the faster secondary process is due to internal degrees of freedom of the nonrigid THF ring
    corecore