Publication | Open Access
Nuclear-Magnetic-Resonance Measurements Reveal the Origin of the Debye Process in Monohydroxy Alcohols
186
Citations
38
References
2010
Year
Relaxation ProcessEngineeringGlass-forming LiquidMagnetic ResonanceMonohydroxy AlcoholsGlass MaterialChemistrySoft MatterMolecular DynamicsGlass TransitionElectron Paramagnetic ResonanceTransient ChainsMolecular KineticsAlcohol DehydrogenasesBiophysicsPhysicsStructural RelaxationDifferent Nuclear ProbesPhysical ChemistryNuclear-magnetic-resonance MeasurementsDebye ProcessMagnetic Resonance SpectroscopyApplied PhysicsDynamic Nuclear PolarizationMedicine
Monohydroxy alcohols show a structural relaxation and at longer time scales a Debye-type dielectric peak. From spin-lattice relaxation experiments using different nuclear probes, an intermediate, slower-than-structural dynamics is identified for n-butanol. Based on these findings and on translational diffusion measurements, a model of self-restructuring, transient chains is proposed. The model is demonstrated to explain consistently the so-far puzzling observations made for this class of hydrogen-bonded glass forming liquids.
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