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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Nuclear Spin Relaxation in Viscous Liquids: Relaxation Stretching of Single-Particle Probes
Th. KörberErnst A. RösslerRoland BöhmerA. DößCatalin GainaruGerald HinzeMichael VogelM. Bechersubject
Coupling constantCouplingHot TemperatureMagnetic Resonance SpectroscopyMaterials scienceViscosityTemperatureViscous liquidMagnetic Resonance ImagingMolecular physicsLight scatteringSpectral lineSurfaces Coatings and FilmsSuperposition principleDeuteriumMaterials ChemistryRelaxation (physics)Physical and Theoretical Chemistrydescription
Spin-lattice relaxation rates R1(ω,T), probed via high-field and field-cycling nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), are used to test the validity of frequency-temperature superposition (FTS) for the reorientation dynamics in viscous liquids. For several liquids, FTS is found to apply so that master curves can be generated. The susceptibility spectra are highly similar to those obtained from depolarized light scattering (DLS) and reveal an excess wing. Where FTS works, two approaches are suggested to access the susceptibility: (i) a plot of deuteron R1(T) vs the spin-spin relaxation rate R2(T) and (ii) a plot of R1(T) vs an independently measured reference time τref(T). Using single-frequency scans, (i) allows one to extract the relaxation stretching as well as the NMR coupling constant. Surveying 26 data sets, we find Kohlrausch functions with exponents 0.39 < βK ≤ 0.67. Plots of the spin-spin relaxation rate R2─rescaled by the NMR coupling constant─as a function of temperature allow one to test how well site-specific NMR relaxations couple to a given reference process. Upon cooling of flexible molecule liquids, the site-specific dynamics is found to merge, suggesting that near Tg the molecules reorient essentially as a rigid entity. This presents a possible resolution for the much lower stretching parameters reported here at high temperatures that contrast with the ones that were reported to be universal in a recent DLS study close to Tg. Our analysis underlines that deuteron relaxation is a uniquely powerful tool to probe single-particle reorientation.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-12-03 | The Journal of Physical Chemistry B |