On supercooling a
liquid, the viscosity rises rapidly until at
the glass transition it vitrifies into an amorphous solid accompanied
by a steep drop in the heat capacity. Therefore, a pure homogeneous
liquid is not expected to display more than one glass transition.
Here we show that a family of single-component homogeneous molecular
liquids, titanium tetraalkoxides, exhibit two calorimetric glass transitions
of comparable magnitude, one of which is the conventional glass transition
associated with dynamic arrest of the bulk liquid properties, while
the other is associated with the freezing out of intramolecular degrees
of freedom. Such intramolecular vitrification is likely to be found
in molecules in which low-frequency terahertz intramolecular motion
is coupled to the surrounding liquid. These results imply that intramolecular
barrier-crossing processes, typically associated with chemical reactivity,
do not necessarily follow the Arrhenius law but may freeze out at
a finite temperature