6533b856fe1ef96bd12b1ea7

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Correlation of primary and secondary relaxations in a supercooled liquid

Roland BöhmerGregor DiezemannGerald HinzeBurkhard GeilM. WinterlichA. Nowaczyk

subject

CrystalPrimary (chemistry)Materials scienceCondensed matter physicsChemical physicsGeneral Physics and AstronomyRelaxation (physics)ObservableSupercoolingSpectroscopy530

description

The widespread assumption that primary and secondary relaxations in glass-forming materials are independent processes is scrutinized using spin-lattice relaxation weighted stimulated-echo spectroscopy. This nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) technique is simultaneously sensitive to the dynamics on well-separated time scales. For the deeply supercooled liquid sorbitol, which exhibits a strong secondary relaxation, the primary relaxation (that is observable using NMR) can be modified by suppressing the contributions of those subensembles which are characterized by relatively slow secondary relaxations. This is clear evidence for a correlation between primary and secondary relaxation times. In the disordered crystal orthocarborane high-frequency processes are absent and consequently no such modifications could be achieved.

https://dx.doi.org/10.17877/de290r-3095