| Literature DB >> 35515549 |
Katarzyna Chat1,2, Grzegorz Szklarz1,2, Karolina Adrjanowicz1,2.
Abstract
Recently, it has been demonstrated that the glassy dynamics of the molecular liquids and polymers confined at the nanoscale level might satisfy the density scaling law (ρ γ /T) with the same value of the scaling exponent, γ, as that determined from the high-pressure studies of the bulk material. In this work, we have tested the validity of this interesting experimental finding for strongly hydrogen-bonded molecular liquid, dipropylene glycol (DPG), which is known to violate the ρ γ /T scaling rule in the supercooled liquid bulk state. The results of the independent dielectric relaxation studies carried out on increased pressure and in nanopores, have led to an important finding that when the density change induced by geometrical confinement is not very large, DPG can still obey the density scaling law with the same value of the scaling exponent as that found for the bulk sample. In this way, we confirm that the information obtained from the universal density scaling approach applied to nanoscale confined systems is somehow consistent with the macroscopic ones and that in both cases the same fundamental rules governs the glass-transition dynamics. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 35515549 PMCID: PMC9065994 DOI: 10.1039/c9ra02289a
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Fig. 1(a) Dielectric loss spectra measured for dipropylene glycol DPG at p = 250 MPa. (b) Comparison of the normalized dielectric loss spectra measured at different combinations of temperature and pressures, but with the α-relaxation peak located approximately at the same frequency. The solid line is a fit to KWW function (with βKWW = 0.67). (c) Temperature evolution of the α-relaxation times measured along different isobar. The solid lines are fits of the experimental data to the VFT equation. (d) Pressure dependence of the glass-transition temperature for DPG (glass transition was defined as a temperature at with τα = 100 s). The solid line is fitting of the experimental data to the Andersson–Andresson equation. (e) Pressure dependence of the fragility index for DPG. The inset demonstrates the variation of the α-relaxation time as a function of the specific volume calculated from using volumetric data parameterized with the use of Tait EOS. (f) Relaxation times plotted as a function of temperature and volume for DPG. The wire surface was obtained by fitting the experimental data to the modified version (T–V) of the Avramov equation.
Fig. 2Test of the density scaling for DPG using isobaric dependences of the α-relaxation time. Using the scaling parameter γ = 1.9, it is not possible to make a perfect collapse of the α-relaxation time measured at various pressure conditions. The inset demonstrates the same set of data scaled with the use of scaling exponent γ = 1.5.
Fig. 3Temperature dependence of the α-relaxation time measured in the bulk and confined to AAO nanopores of approx. The same pore size for the hydrogen bonding liquid DPG (dTg/dp = 98 K GPa−1 – present study) and a siloxane polymer PMPS (dTg/dp = 289 K GPa−1).[51] Solid lines denote VFT fits of τα(T) dependence for the bulk materials. Data were recorded by following the same thermal protocols (on slow cooling with 0.2 K min−1 and after quench with 10 K min−1). Dashed lines are isochoric dependencies of α-relaxation times determined based on the pressure-dependent dynamics. The same insets show the change in the volume frozen at the glass transition temperature of the interfacial layer (Tg_interface) as a function of the inverse pore diameter.
Fig. 4(a) The α-relaxation time plotted as a function of temperature for DPG in the bulk and confined to alumina nanopores (pore diameters from 100 nm to 18 nm). Dielectric data was recorded on slow cooling (∼0.2 K min−1). The solid line is a fitting of the data to the VFT equation. (b) The α-relaxation times taken from the temperature region at which deviation from the bulk liquid behavior takes place (marked by dashed-line circle in panel (a)) and plotted versus Tg_core/T (Tg_core = T at which τα = 1 s). (c) The relationship between the glass transition temperature of the core molecule and the volume of the confined liquid corresponding to that temperature analyzed for different pore sizes and plotted in double logarithmic scale. The slope gives the scaling exponent γ = 1.9. (d) Testing of density scaling of the α-relaxation time which includes isobaric data measured for DPG in the bulk and confined to AAO nanopores. The best match of the data was achieved with γ = 1.9. The inset shows density scaling only for nanopore data.