106 research outputs found
New challenges for the pressure evolution of the glass temperature
The ways of portrayal of the pressure evolution of the glass temperature (Tg)
beyond the dominated Simon-Glatzel-like pattern are discussed. This includes
the possible common description of Tg(P) dependences in systems described by
dtg/dP>0 and dTg/dP<0. The latter is associated with the maximum of Tg(P) curve
hidden in the negative pressures domain. The issue of volume and density
changes along the vitrification curve is also noted. Finally, the universal
pattern of vitrification associated with the crossover from the low density
(isotropic stretching) to the high density (isotropic compression) systems is
proposed. Hypothetically, it may obey any glass former, from molecular liquids
to colloids
Pretransitional Behavior and Dynamics in Liquid Crystal–Based Nanocolloids
The impact of nanoparticles on phase transitions in liquid crystal (LC)—nanoparticle nanocollids is still little known. This contribution results for dodecylcyanobiphenyl (12CB), pentylcyanobiphenyl (5CB), and hexyl isothiocyanatobiphenyl (6BT) as the LC host with the addition of BaTiO3 barium titanate barium titanate nanoparticles. The latter has a strong impact on the value of dielectric constant, relaxation time, and the discontinuity of the isotropic–mesophase transitions. The first-ever high-pressure studies in such systems are also presented
The fluid-like and critical behavior of the isotropic-nematic transition appearing in linear and non-linear dielectric studies
A short review of literature and the authors' experimental results for the pretransitional behavior in the isotropic phase of nematogens is given. The paper also presents new results of non-linear dielectric effect and dielectric
permittivity measurements in the broad temperature range. Results obtained show significant advantages of non-linear dielectric effect and dielectric permittivity for studying pretransitional properties in liquid crystalline
materials. The paper contains a comprehensive comparison of the experiment with predictions of the mean-field model and the fluid-like description. The presented analysis strongly supports the image of the isotropic phase as
a complex liquid resulting from vicinity of the fluid-like, "nematic-isotropic", critical point
Broadband dielectric studies in linseed oil: Supercriticality and the New Insight into Melting/Freezing Discontinuous Transition
The long-range supercritical changes of dielectric constant, resembling ones
observed in the isotropic phase of rod-like liquid crystalline compounds, are
evidenced on approaching liquid-solid discontinuous phase transition. The
'supercriticality' can be an additional factor for supporting the unique
pro-health properties of linseed oil. It can also be significant for numerous
technological applications. The report also reveals properties significant for
melting/freezing discontinuous phase transition cognitive puzzle. Broadband
dielectric spectroscopy studies revealed long-range premelting (heating from
the solid phase) and post-freezing (cooling from the liquid phase) effects with
critical-like parametrizations. They can be correlated with the 'grain model'
for premelting and its development by the Lipovsky model. The evidence for the
post-freezing effect, with the critical-like portrayal, may indicate a specific
granular solidification associated with pretransitional fluctuations. Numerous
hallmarks of liquid-liquid and solid-solid phase transitions have also been
found. Notably, the melting temperature surrounding is related to the minimum
and the freezing temperature to the maximum of dielectric loss factor
D=tan(delta). Regarding dynamics, three primary relaxation processes have been
found. Their changes in subsequent temperature intervals, related to the
apparent activation enthalpy, follow critical-like patterns with the same
singular temperature. For relaxation times evolution, it leads to optimal
parameterizations via the 'critical and activated' equation, recently proposed.Comment: 14 Figures , 15 equation
Continuous Isotropic-Nematic transition in compressed rod-like based nanocolloid
Landau - de Gennes mean field model predicts the discontinuous transition for
the Isotropic - Nematic transition, associated with uniaxial and quadrupolar
order parameter in three dimensions. This report shows pressure-related
dielectric studies for rod-like nematogenic pentylcyanobiphenyl (5CB) and its
nanocolloids with BaTiO3 nanoparticles. The scan of dielectric constant
revealed the continuous I-N transition in a compressed nanocolloid with a tiny
amount of nanoparticles (x=0.1%). For the nematic phase in 5CB and its x=1%
nanocolloid the enormous values of dielectric constant and the bending-type
long-range pretransitional behavior were detected. The 'shaping' influence of
pretransitional fluctuations was also detected for the ionic-related
contribution to dielectric permittivity in the isotropic phase. For the
high-frequency relaxation domain, this impact was tested for the primary
relaxation time and the translational-orientaional decoupling.Comment: 28 pages, 7 figure
Fragility and basic process energies in vitrifying systems
The concept of 'fragility' constitutes a central point of the glass transition science serving as the 'universal' metric linking previtreous dynamics of qualitatively distinct systems. Finding the fundamental meaning of fragility is the 'condicio sine qua' for reaching the long expected conceptual breakthrough in this domain. This report shows that fragility is determined by the ratio between two fundamental process energies, viz. the activation enthalpy and activation energy. The reasoning, avoiding any underlying physical model, is supported by the experimental evidence ranging from low molecular weight liquids and polymers to plastic crystals and liquid crystals. All these lead to the new general scaling plot for dynamics of arbitrary glass former. The limited adequacy of broadly used so far semi-empirical relationships between fragility and the activation energy is shown. Results presented remain valid for an arbitrary complex system and collective phenomena if their dynamics is described by the general super-Arrhenius relation.National Centre for Science (Poland
Divergent dynamics and the Kauzmann temperature in glass forming systems
In the last decade the challenging analysis of previtreous behavior of relaxation time (Ï.,(T)) in ultraviscous low molecular weight liquids led to the conceptual shift of the glass transition physics toward theories not predicting a finite-temperature divergence. This "breakthrough" experimental finding was strengthened by the discovery that "dynamic "(i.e. from τ(T) fitting) and thermodynamic estimations of the ideal glass (Kauzmann) temperature do not match, what in fact questioned its existence. In this report, due to the novel way of analysis based on the transformation of τ(T) experimental data to the activation energy temperature index form, the clear prevalence of the finite-temperature divergence is proved. The obtained dynamic singular temperatures clearly coincide with thermodynamic estimations of the Kauzmann temperature, thus solving also the second mystery. The comprehensive picture was obtained due to the analysis of 55 experimental data-sets, ranging from low molecular weight liquids and polymers to liquid crystal and plastic crystals
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