80 research outputs found
Study of the heating effect contribution to the nonlinear dielectric response of a supercooled liquid
We present a detailed study of the heating effects in dielectric measurements
carried out on a liquid. Such effects come from the dissipation of the electric
power in the liquid and give a contribution to the nonlinear third harmonics
susceptibility chi_3 which depends on the frequency and temperature. This study
is used to evaluate a possible `spurious' contribution to the recently measured
nonlinear susceptibility of an archetypical glassforming liquid (Glycerol).
Those measurements have been shown to give a direct evaluation of the number of
dynamically correlated molecules temperature dependence close to the glass
transition temperature T_g~190K (Crauste-Thibierge et al., Phys. Rev. Lett
104,165703(2010)). We show that the heating contribution is totally negligible
(i) below 204K at any frequency; (ii) for any temperature at the frequency
where the third harmonics response chi_3 is maximum. Besides, this heating
contribution does not scale as a function of f/f_{\alpha}, with f_{\alpha}(T)
the relaxation frequency of the liquid. In the high frequency range, when
f/f_{\alpha} >= 1, we find that the heating contribution is damped because the
dipoles cannot follow instantaneously the temperature modulation due to the
heating phenomenon. An estimate of the magnitude of this damping is given.Comment: 25 pages, 10 figures, Accepted for publication in Journal of Chemical
Physic
A method for measuring the nonlinear response in dielectric spectroscopy through third harmonics detection
We present a high sensitivity method allowing the measurement of the non
linear dielectric susceptibility of an insulating material at finite frequency.
It has been developped for the study of dynamic heterogeneities in supercooled
liquids using dielectric spectroscopy at frequencies 0.05 Hz < f < 30000 Hz .
It relies on the measurement of the third harmonics component of the current
flowing out of a capacitor. We first show that standard laboratory electronics
(amplifiers and voltage sources) nonlinearities lead to limits on the third
harmonics measurements that preclude reaching the level needed by our physical
goal, a ratio of the third harmonics to the fundamental signal about 7 orders
of magnitude lower than 1. We show that reaching such a sensitivity needs a
method able to get rid of the nonlinear contributions both of the measuring
device (lock-in amplifier) and of the excitation voltage source. A bridge using
two sources fulfills only the first of these two requirements, but allows to
measure the nonlinearities of the sources. Our final method is based on a
bridge with two plane capacitors characterized by different dielectric layer
thicknesses. It gets rid of the source and amplifier nonlinearities because in
spite of a strong frequency dependence of the capacitors impedance, it is
equilibrated at any frequency. We present the first measurements of the
physical nonlinear response using our method. Two extensions of the method are
suggested.Comment: 25 pages, 8 figure
Real time decoherence of Landau and Levitov quasi-particles in quantum Hall edge channels
Quantum Hall edge channels at integer filling factor provide a unique
test-bench to understand decoherence and relaxation of single electronic
excitations in a ballistic quantum conductor. In this Letter, we obtain a full
visualization of the decoherence scenario of energy (Landau) and time (Levitov)
resolved single electron excitations at filling factor . We show that
the Landau excitation exhibits a fast relaxation followed by spin-charge
separation whereas the Levitov excitation only experiences spin-charge
separation. We finally suggest to use Hong-Ou-Mandel type experiments to probe
specific signatures of these different scenarios.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figure
Evidence of growing spatial correlations at the glass transition from nonlinear response experiments
The ac nonlinear dielectric response of glycerol was
measured close to its glass transition temperature to investigate the
prediction that supercooled liquids respond in an increasingly non-linear way
as the dynamics slows down (as spin-glasses do). We find that
indeed displays several non trivial features. It is peaked
as a function of the frequency and obeys scaling as a function of
, with the relaxation time of the liquid. The height
of the peak, proportional to the number of dynamically correlated molecules
, increases as the system becomes glassy, and decays as a
power-law of over several decades beyond the peak. These findings
confirm the collective nature of the glassy dynamics and provide the first
direct estimate of the dependence of .Comment: 22 pages, 6 figures. With respect to v1, a few new sentences were
added in the introduction and conclusion, references were updated, some typos
corrected
Observation of superspin glass state in magnetically textured ferrofluid (gamma-Fe2O3)
Magnetic properties in a magnetically textured ferrofluid made out of
interacting maghemite (gamma-Fe2O3) nanoparticles suspended in glycerin have
been investigated. Despite the loss of uniform distribution of anisotropy axes,
a superspin glass state exists at low temperature in a concentrated, textured
ferrofluid as in the case of its non-textured counterpart. The onset of
superspin glass state was verified from the sample's AC susceptibility. The
influence of the anisotropy axis orientation on the aging behavior in the
glassy states is also discussed
Experimental search for dynamic heterogeneities in molecular glass formers
We have measured the linear dielectric susceptibility of two molecular glass
formers close to Tg in order to estimate the size of the dynamically correlated
clusters of molecules which are expected to govern the physics of glass
formation. This size has been shown to be related to the dynamic dielectric
susceptibility dEps(w)/dT (Eps : dielectric susceptibility, T : temperature,
w: frequency). To allow for an accurate determination of the T
derivative, we scanned the interval 192 < T < 232 K every 1 K for glycerol and
159 < T < 179 K every 0.5 K for propylene carbonate. The resolution on T
variations was about 1 mK. The result for glycerol is that the number of
correlated molecules increases by a factor 3 when T goes from 226 to 195 K. It
has been shown that the non-linear susceptibility provides a direct measurement
of dynamic correlations. To measure it, we used a standard Lockin technique
yielding the third harmonic of the current flowing out of a capacitor. We
obtained only an upper limit on the ratio of the third to the first harmonic,
due to the non-linear response of standard electronics.Comment: 7 page
Superspin glass aging behavior in textured and nontextured frozen ferrofluid
The effect of magnetic anisotropy-axis alignment of individual nanoparticles
on the collective aging behavior in the superspin glass state of a frozen
ferrofluid has been investigated. The ferrofluid studied here consists of
maghemite nanoparticles (\gamma-Fe2O3, mean diameter = 8.6 nm) dispersed in
glycerin at a volume fraction of ~15%. The low temperature aging behavior has
been explored through 'zero-field cooled magnetization' (ZFCM) relaxation
measurements using SQUID magnetometry. The ZFCM response functions were found
to scale with effective age of the system in both textured and non-textured
superspin glass states, but with markedly different scaling exponents, \mu. The
value of {\mu} was found to shift from ~0.9 in non-textured case to ~ 0.6 in
the textured case, despite the identical cooling protocol used in both
experiments
Anisotropy-axis orientation effect on the magnetization of {\gamma}-Fe2O3 frozen ferrofluid
The effect of magnetic anisotropy-axis alignment on the superparamagnetic
(SPM) and superspin glass (SSG) states in a frozen ferrofluid has been
investigated. The ferrofluid studied here consists of maghemite nanoparticles
(\gamma-Fe2O3, mean diameter = 8.6 nm) dispersed in glycerine at a volume
fraction of ~15%. In the high temperature SPM state, the magnetization of
aligned ferrofluid increased by a factor varying between 2 and 4 with respect
to that in the randomly oriented state. The negative interaction energy
obtained from the Curie-Weiss fit to the high temperature susceptibility in the
SPM states as well as the SSG phase onset temperature determined from the
linear magnetization curves were found to be rather insensitive to the
anisotropy axis alignment. The low temperature aging behaviour, explored via
"zero-field cooled magnetization" (ZFCM) relaxation measurements, however, show
distinct difference in the aging dynamics in the anisotropy-axis aligned and
randomly oriented SSG states.Comment: to appear in Journal of Physics D: Applied Physic
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