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1.
Optically heterodyne-detected optical Kerr effect (OHD-OKE) experiments are conducted to study the orientational dynamics of a discotic liquid crystal 2,3,6,7,10,11-hexakis(pentyloxy)triphenylene (HPT) in the isotropic phase near the columnar-isotropic (C-I) phase transition. The OHD-OKE signal of HPT is characterized by an intermediate power law t(-0.76+/-0.02) at short times (a few picoseconds), a von Schweidler power law t(-0.26+/-0.01) at intermediate times (hundreds of picoseconds), and an exponential decay at long times (tens of nanoseconds). The exponential decay has Arrhenius temperature dependence. The functional form of the total time dependent decay is identical to the one observed previously for a large number of molecular supercooled liquids. The mode coupling theory schematic model based on the Sjogren [Phys. Rev. A 33, 1254 (1986)] model is able to reproduce the HPT data over a wide range of times from <1 ps to tens of nanoseconds. The studies indicate that the HPT C-I phase transition is a strong first order transition, and the dynamics in the isotropic phase display a complex time dependent profile that is common to other molecular liquids that lack mesoscopic structure.  相似文献   

2.
Optically heterodyne-detected optical Kerr effect experiments are applied to study the orientational dynamics of the supercooled ionic organic liquids N-propyl-3-methylpyridinium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide (PMPIm) and 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium tosylate (EMImTOS). The orientational dynamics are complex with relaxation involving several power law decays followed by a final exponential decay. A mode coupling theory (MCT) schematic model, the Sj?gren model, was able to reproduce the PMPIm data very successfully over a wide range of times from 1 ps to hundreds of ns for all temperatures studied. Over the temperature range from room temperature down to the critical temperature Tc of 231 K, the OHD-OKE signal of PMPIm is characterized by the intermediate power law t(-1.00+/-0.04) at short times, a von Schweidler power law t(-0.51+/-0.03) at intermediate times, and a highly temperature-dependent exponential (alpha relaxation) at long times. This form of the decay is identical to the form observed previously for a large number of organic van der Waals liquids. MCT analysis indicates that the theory can explain the experimental data very well for a range of temperatures above Tc, but as might be expected, there are some deviations from the theoretical modeling at temperatures close to Tc. For EMImTOS, the orientational dynamics were studied on the ps time scale in the deeply supercooled region near its glass transition temperature. The orientational relaxation of EMImTOS clearly displays the feature associated with the boson peak at approximately 2 ps, which is the first time domain evidence of the boson peak in ionic organic liquids. Overall, all the dynamical features observed earlier for organic van der Waals liquids using the same experimental technique are also observed for organic ionic liquids.  相似文献   

3.
The translational motion of 4-n-hexyl-4'-cyanobiphenyl (6CB) in its isotropic phase has been studied by atomistic molecular dynamics simulation from 280 to 330 K. The mean square displacement shows evidence of a subdiffusive dynamics, with a plateau that becomes very apparent at the lowest temperatures. A three-time self-intermediate scattering function reveals that this plateau is connected with a homogeneous dynamics that, at longer times, becomes heterogeneous and finally exponential. These features are shared by, for example, a high-density system of hard spheres, which supports the universal character of the translational dynamics of liquids in their supercooled condition. As predicted by the idealized version of the mode-coupling theory (MCT), the diffusion coefficient dependence upon temperature is well described by a power law, with a critical temperature very close to that obtained by experimental measurements on orientational relaxation. This agreement might indicate a complete freezing of both rotational and translational intradomain dynamics. The time-temperature superposition principle also holds. The shape of the cage that surrounds a 6CB molecule has been reconstructed, and this analysis suggests a preferential side-by-side arrangement of molecules, which locally tend to align their long axes even in the isotropic phase.  相似文献   

4.
《Chemical physics letters》2002,350(1-2):82-87
Optical heterodyne detected optical Kerr effect (OHD-OKE) experiments are used to study the orientational dynamics of the liquid crystal 4-octyl-4-biphenylcarbonitrile (8CB) in the isotropic phase near the isotropic to nematic phase transition. The results are compared to those for three other liquid crystals. The 8CB data display a short time scale temperature independent power law decay and a long time scale exponential decay with a temperature dependence described by Landau–de Gennes theory. The power law exponent is −0.56. Combining this result with previous results for three other liquid crystals [J. Chem. Phys. 116 (2002) 6339; J. Chem. Phys. 116 (2002) 360], it is found that the power law exponent depends linearly on the aspect ratio of the liquid crystal.  相似文献   

5.
Optical heterodyne-detected optical Kerr effect (OHD-OKE) experiments are presented for the supercooled liquid acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin - ASP). The ASP data and previously published OHD-OKE data on supercooled dibutylphthalate (DBP) display highly damped oscillations with a periods of approximately 2 ps as the temperature is reduced to and below the mode coupling theory (MCT) temperature T(C). The oscillations become more pronounced below T(C). The oscillations can be interpreted as the time domain signature of the boson peak. Recently a schematic MCT model, the Sjogren model, was used to describe the OHD-OKE data for a number of supercooled liquids by Gotze and Sperl [W. Gotze and M. Sperl, Phys. Rev. E 92, 105701 (2004)] , but the short-time and low-temperature behaviors were not addressed. Franosch et al. [T. Franosch, W. Gotze, M. R. Mayr, and A. P. Singh, Phys. Rev. E 55, 3183 (1997)] found that the Sjogren model could describe the boson peak observed by depolarized light-scattering (DLS) experiments on glycerol. The OHD-OKE experiment measures a susceptibility that is a time domain equivalent of the spectrum measured in DLS. Here we present a detailed analysis of the ASP and DBP data over a broad range of times and temperatures using the Sjogren model. The MCT schematic model is able to describe the data very well at all temperatures and relevant time scales. The trajectory of MCT parameters that fit the high-temperature data (no short-time oscillations) when continued below T(C) results in calculations that reproduce the oscillations seen in the data. The results indicate that increasing translational-rotational coupling is responsible for the appearance of the boson peak as the temperature approaches and drops below T(C).  相似文献   

6.
Recent optical Kerr effect experiments have revealed a power law decay of the measured signal with a temperature independent exponent at short-to-intermediate times for a number of liquid crystals in the isotropic phase near the isotropic-nematic transition and supercooled molecular liquids above the mode coupling theory critical temperature. In this work, the authors investigate the temperature dependence of short-to-intermediate time orientational relaxation in a model thermotropic liquid crystal across the isotropic-nematic transition and in a binary mixture across the supercooled liquid regime in molecular dynamics simulations. The measure of the experimentally observable optical Kerr effect signal is found to follow a power law decay at short-to-intermediate times for both systems in agreement with recent experiments. In addition, the temperature dependence of the power law exponent is found to be rather weak. As the model liquid crystalline system settles into the nematic phase upon cooling, the decay of the single-particle second-rank orientational time correlation function exhibits a pattern that is similar to what has been observed for supercooled liquids.  相似文献   

7.
The isotropic phase dynamics of a system of 4-n-hexyl-4'-cyano-biphenyl (6CB) molecules has been studied by molecular dynamics computer simulations. We have explored the range of 275-330 K keeping the system isotropic, although supercooled under its nematic transition temperature. The weak rototranslational coupling allowed us to separately evaluate translational (TDOF) and orientational degrees of freedom (ODOF). Evidences of subdiffusive dynamics, more apparent at the lowest temperatures, are found in translational and orientational dynamics. Mean square displacement as well as self-intermediate center of mass and rotational scattering functions show a plateau, also visible in the orientational correlation function. According to the mode coupling theory (MCT), this plateau is the signature of the beta-relaxation regime. Three-time intermediate scattering functions reveal that the plateau is related to a homogeneous dynamics, more extended in time for the orientational degrees of freedom (up to 1 ns). The time-temperature superposition principle and the factorization property predicted by the idealized version of MCT hold, again for both kinds of dynamics. The temperature dependence of diffusion coefficient and orientational relaxation time is well described by a power law. Critical temperatures Tc are 244+/-6 and 258+/-6 K, respectively, the latter is some 10 K below the corresponding experimental values. The different values of Tc we obtained indicate that ODOF freezes earlier than TDOF. This appears due to the strongly anisotropic environment that surrounds a 6CB molecule, even in the isotropic phase. The lifetime of these "cages," estimated by time dependent conditional probability functions, is strongly temperature dependent, ranging from some hundreds of picoseconds at 320 K to a few nanoseconds at 275 K.  相似文献   

8.
The orientational dynamics of thermotropic liquid crystals across the isotropic-nematic phase transition have traditionally been investigated at long times or low frequencies using frequency domain measurements. The situation has now changed significantly with the recent report of a series of interesting transient optical Kerr effect (OKE) experiments that probed orientational relaxation of a number of calamitic liquid crystals (which consist of rod-like molecules) directly in the time domain, over a wide time window ranging from subpicoseconds to tens of microseconds. The most intriguing revelation is that the decay of the OKE signal at short to intermediate times (from a few tens of picoseconds to several hundred nanoseconds) follows multiple temporal power laws. Another remarkable feature that has emerged from these OKE measurements is the similarity in the orientational relaxation behavior between the isotropic phase of calamitic liquid crystals near the isotropic-nematic transition and supercooled molecular liquids, notwithstanding their largely different macroscopic states. In this article, we present an overview of the understanding that has emerged from recent computational and theoretical studies of calamitic liquid crystals across the isotropic-nematic transition. Topics discussed include (a) single-particle as well as collective orientational dynamics at a short-to-intermediate time window, (b) heterogeneous dynamics in orientational degrees of freedom diagnosed by a non-Gaussian parameter, (c) fragility, and (d) temperature-dependent exploration of underlying energy landscapes as calamitic liquid crystals settle into increasingly ordered mesophases upon cooling from the high-temperature isotropic phase. A comparison of our results with those of supercooled molecular liquids reveals an array of analogous features in these two important classes of soft matter systems. We further find that the onset of growth of the orientational order in the parent nematic phase induces translational order, resulting in smectic-like layers in the potential energy minima of calamitic systems if the parent nematic phase is sandwiched between the high-temperature isotropic phase and the low-temperature smectic phase. We discuss implications of this startling observation. We also discuss recent results on the orientational dynamics of discotic liquid crystals that are found to be rather similar to those of calamitic liquid crystals.  相似文献   

9.
Relaxation in the nematic liquid crystalline phase is known to be sensitive to its proximity to both isotropic and smectic phases. Recent transient optical Kerr effect (OKE) studies have revealed, rather surprisingly, two temporal power laws at short to intermediate times and also an apparent absence of the expected exponential decay at longer times. In order to understand this unusual dynamics, we have carried out extensive molecular dynamics simulations of transient OKE and related orientational time correlation functions in a system of prolate ellipsoids (with aspect ratio equal to 3). The simulations find two distinct power laws, with a crossover region, in the decay of the orientational time correlation function at short to intermediate times (in the range of a few picoseconds to a few nanoseconds). In addition, the simulation results fail to recover any long time exponential decay component. The system size dependence of the exponents suggests that the first power law may originate from the local orientational density fluctuations (like in a glassy liquid). The origin of the second power law is less clear and may be related to the long range fluctuations (such as smecticlike density fluctuations)--these fluctuations are expected to involve small free energy barriers. In support of the latter, the evidence of pronounced coupling between orientational and spatial densities at intermediate wave numbers is presented. This coupling is usually small in normal isotropic liquids, but it is large in the present case. In addition to slow collective orientational relaxation, the single particle orientational relaxation is also found to exhibit slow dynamics in the nematic phase in the long time.  相似文献   

10.
Using time resolved optical depolarization, we have studied the rotational behavior of molecular probes in supercooled liquids near the glass transition temperature T(g). Simultaneously, the dynamics of the liquid immediately surrounding these rigid probes is measured by triplet state solvation experiments. This direct comparison of solute and solvent dynamics is particularly suited for assessing the origin of exponential orientational correlation functions of probe molecules embedded in liquids which exhibit highly nonexponential structural relaxation. Polarization angle dependent Stokes shift correlation functions demonstrate that probe rotation time and solvent response time are locally correlated quantities in the case of smaller probe molecules. Varying the size of both guest and host molecules shows that the size ratio determines the rotational behavior of the probes. The results are indicative of time averaging being at the origin of exponential rotation of probes whose rotational time constant is slower than solvent relaxation by a factor of 20 or more.  相似文献   

11.
The orientational dynamics of a homeotropically aligned nematic liquid crystal, 4'-pentyl-4-biphenylcarbonitrile (5-CB), is studied over more than six decades of time (500 fs to 2 mus) using optical heterodyne detected optical Kerr effect experiments. In contrast to the dynamics of nematogens in the isotropic phase, the data do not decay as a highly temperature-dependent exponential on the longest time scale, but rather, a temperature-independent power law spanning more than two decades of time, the final power law, is observed. On short time scales (approximately 3 ps to approximately 1 ns) another power law, the intermediate power law, is observed that is temperature dependent. The power law exponent of the correlation function associated with the intermediate power law displays a linear dependence on the change in the nematic order parameter with temperature. Between the intermediate power law and the final power law, there is a crossover region that displays an inflection point. The temperature-dependent orientational dynamics in the nematic phase are shown to be very different than those observed in the isotropic phase.  相似文献   

12.
The solvation dynamics and local orientational friction for a series of four ionic liquids have been probed using coumarin 153 (C153) as a function of temperature. These ionic liquids are comprised of nonaromatic organic cations paired with a common anion, bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide (NTf(2)-). The specific liquids are as follows: N-methyl-tri-N-butylammonium NTf(2)- (N(1444)+/NTf(2)-), N-hexyl-tri-N-butylammonium NTf(2)- (N(6444)+/NTf(2)-), N-methyl-N-butylpyrrolidinium NTf(2)- (Pyrr(14)+/NTf(2)-), and N-methyl-N-ethoxyethylpyrrolidinium NTf(2)- (Pyrr(1(2O2))+/NTf(2)-). The observed solvation dynamics and fluorescence depolarization dynamics occur over a broad range of time scales that can only be adequately fit by functions including three or more exponential components. Stretched exponential distributions cannot adequately fit our data. The solvation and reorientational dynamics of the C153 probe are studied over a range of temperatures from 278.2 to 353.2 K. For both the solvation dynamics and the probe reorientational dynamics, the observed temperature dependence is well fit by a Vogel-Tammann-Fulcher law. To correlate the observed microscopic dynamics with macroscopic physical properties, temperature-dependent viscosities are also measured. Differential scanning calorimetry is used to study the thermodynamics of the phase transitions from the liquid to supercooled liquid to glassy states. For the two tetraalkylammonium liquids, the observed melting transitions occur near 300 K, so we are able to study the dynamics in a clearly supercooled regime. Very long time scale orientational relaxation time constants dynamics on the order of 100 ns are observed in the C153 fluorescence anisotropy. These are interpreted to arise from long-lived local structures in the environment surrounding the C153 probe.  相似文献   

13.
We report a first-principles molecular-dynamics study of the relaxation dynamics in liquid silicon (l-Si) over a wide temperature range (1000-2200 K). We find that the intermediate scattering function for l-Si exhibits a compressed exponential decay above 1200 K including the supercooled regime, which is in stark contrast to that for normal "dense" liquids which typically show stretched exponential decay in the supercooled regime. The coexistence of particles having ballistic-like motion and those having diffusive-like motion is demonstrated, which accounts for the compressed exponential decay in l-Si. An attempt to elucidate the crossover from the ballistic to the diffusive regime in the "time-dependent" diffusion coefficient is made and the temperature-independent universal feature of the crossover is disclosed.  相似文献   

14.
The dynamics of two nematic liquid crystals, 4-(trans-4(')-n-octylcyclohexyl)isothiocyanatobenzene and 4-(4-pentyl-cyclohexyl)-benzonitrile, are investigated as a function of temperature both in the homeotropically aligned nematic phase and in the isotropic phase using optical heterodyne-detected optical Kerr effect experiments, which measures the time derivative of the polarizability-polarizability-correlation function (orientational relaxation). Data are presented over a time range of 500 fs-70 micros for the nematic phase and 500 fs to a few hundred nanoseconds for the isotropic phase. The nematic dynamics are compared with a previously studied liquid crystal in the nematic phase. All three liquid crystals have very similar dynamics in the nematic phase that are very different from the isotropic phase. On the slowest time scale (20 ns-70 micros), a temperature-independent power law, the final power law, t(-f) with f approximately 0.5, is observed. On short time scales (approximately 3 ps to approximately 1 ns), a temperature-dependent intermediate power law is observed with an exponent that displays a linear dependence on the nematic order parameter. Between the intermediate power law and the final power law, there is a crossover region that has an inflection point. For times that are short compared to the intermediate power law (approximately <2 ps), the data decay much faster, and can be described as a third power law, although this functional form is not definitive. The isotopic phase data have the same features as found in previous studies of nematogens in the isotropic phase, i.e., the temperature-independent intermediate power law and von Schweidler power law at short to intermediate times, and a highly temperature-dependent long time exponential decay that is well described by the Landau-de Gennes theory. The results show that liquid-crystal dynamics in the nematic phase exhibit universal behavior.  相似文献   

15.
Recent optical kerr effect (OKE) studies have revealed that orientational relaxation of rodlike nematogens near the isotropic-nematic (I-N) phase boundary and also in the nematic phase exhibit temporal power law decay at intermediate times. Such behaviour has drawn an intriguing analogy with supercooled liquids. Here, we have investigated the single-particle and collective orientational dynamics of a family of model system of thermotropic liquid crystals using extensive computer simulations. Several remarkable features of glassy dynamics are on display including non-exponential relaxation, dynamical heterogeneity, and non-Arrhenius temperature dependence of the orientational relaxation time. Over a temperature range near the I-N phase boundary, the system behaves like a fragile glass-forming liquid. Using proper scaling, we construct the usual relaxation time versus inverse temperature plot and explicitly demonstrate that one can successfully define a density dependent fragility of liquid crystals. The fragility of liquid crystals shows a temperature and density dependence which is remarkably similar to the fragility of glass forming supercooled liquids. Energy landscape analysis of inherent structures shows that the breakdown of the Arrhenius temperature dependence of relaxation rate occurs at a temperature that marks the onset of the growth of the depth of the potential energy minima explored by the system.  相似文献   

16.
Physical processes in supercooled liquids are discussed and it is explained how elasticity might prevail. Consequently a theory is presented for the VH spectrum of low frequency light scattering from an isotropic solid-like visco-elastic medium containing molecules with orientational degrees of freedom. In contrast with the low frequency VH spectrum from non-elastic fluids the present one contains under specified conditions two central lorentzians instead of only one in addition to two pairs of shifted lorentzians and dispersion curves. The information that can be extracted from comparing this theory to experimental data contains a constant which designates the degree of elasticity and also orientational relaxation times, shear viscosities and coupling constants between the translational and the orientational motions.  相似文献   

17.
Recent Kerr relaxation experiments by Gottke et al. have revealed the existence of a pronounced temporal power law decay in the orientational relaxation near the isotropic-nematic phase transition (INPT) of nematogens of rather small aspect ratio, kappa (kappa approximately 3-4). We have carried out very long (50 ns) molecular dynamics simulations of model (Gay-Berne) prolate ellipsoids with aspect ratio 3 in order to investigate the origin of this power law. The model chosen is known to undergo an isotropic to nematic phase transition for a range of density and temperature. The distance dependence of the calculated angular pair correlation function correctly shows the emergence of a long range correlation as the INPT is approached along the density axis. In the vicinity of INPT, the single particle second rank orientational time correlation function exhibits power law decay, (t(-alpha)) with exponent alpha approximately 2/3. More importantly, we find the sudden appearance of a pronounced power-law decay in the collective part of the second rank orientational time correlation function at short times when the density is very close to the transition density. The power law has an exponent close to unity, that is, the correlation function decays almost linearly with time. At long times, the decay is exponential-like, as predicted by Landau-de Gennes mean field theory. Since Kerr relaxation experiments measure the time derivative of the collective second rank orientational pair correlation function, the simulations recover the near independence of the signal on time observed in experiments. In order to capture the microscopic essence of the dynamics of pseudonematic domains inside the isotropic phase, we introduce and calculate a dynamic orientational pair correlation function (DOPCF) obtained from the coefficients in the expansion of the distinct part of orientational van Hove time correlation function in terms of spherical harmonics. The DOPCF exhibits power law relaxation when the pair separation length is below certain critical length. The orientational relaxation of a local director, defined in terms of the sum of unit vectors of all the ellipsoidal molecules, is also found to show slow power law relaxation over a long time scale. These results have been interpreted in terms of a newly developed mode coupling theory of orientational dynamics near the INPT. In the present case, the difference between the single particle and the collective orientational relaxation is huge which can be explained by the frequency dependence of the memory kernel, calculated from the mode coupling theory. The relationship of this power law with the one observed in a supercooled liquid near its glass transition temperature is explored.  相似文献   

18.
We provide extended evidence that mode-coupling theory (MCT) of supercooled liquids for the F(12) schematic model admits a microscopic realization based on facilitated spin models with tunable facilitation. Depending on the facilitation strength, one observes two distinct dynamical glass transition lines-continuous and discontinuous-merging at a dynamical tricritical-like point with critical decay exponents consistently related by MCT predictions. The mechanisms of dynamical arrest can be naturally interpreted in geometrical terms: the discontinuous and continuous transitions correspond to bootstrap and standard percolation processes, in which the incipient spanning cluster of frozen spins forms either a compact or a fractal structure, respectively. Our cooperative dynamical facilitation picture of glassy behavior is complementary to the one based on disordered systems and can account for higher-order singularity scenarios in the absence of a finite temperature thermodynamic glass transition. We briefly comment on the relevance of our results to finite spatial dimensions and to the F(13) schematic model.  相似文献   

19.
We have investigated the Raman profiles of the nu(C[Triple Bond]N) and nu(C=O) vibrational modes of the nematic liquid crystal ME6N (4-cyanophenyl-4(')-hexylbenzoate) in the isotropic phase at different temperatures and used them as probes of the dynamics and structural organization of this liquid. The vibrational time correlation functions of the nu(C[Triple Bond]N) mode, rather adequately interpreted within the assumption of exponential modulation function (the Kubo-Rothschild theory), indicate that the system experiences an intermediate dynamical regime that gets only slightly faster with increasing temperature. However, this theory fails in predicting the non-exponential behavior that the time correlation functions manifest in the long time range (t>3 ps). For this reason we have additionally approached the interpretation of vibrational correlation functions in terms of the theory formulated by Rothschild and co-workers for locally structured liquids. The application of this theory reveals that the molecular dynamics in this liquid crystal in the isotropic phase is that deriving from a distribution of differently sized clusters, which narrows as the temperature increases. Even at the highest temperature reached in this study (87 degrees C above the nematic-isotropic transition), the liquid has not yet achieved the structure of the simple liquid and the dynamics has not reached the limit of the single channel process. The vibrational and orientational relaxations occur in very different time scales. The temperature independence of the orientational dynamics in the whole range from 55 degrees C to 135 degrees C has been referred to the nonhydrodynamic behavior of the system, arising when local pseudonematic structures persist for times longer than the orientational relaxation. The occurrence of the process of resonant vibrational energy transfer between the C=O groups of adjacent molecules has been revealed in the isotropic phase by a slightly positive Raman noncoincidence effect in the band associated with the nu(C=O) mode. A qualitative interpretation is tentatively given in terms of partial cancellation of contributions deriving from structures having opposite orientations of their C=O groups.  相似文献   

20.
The ultrafast dynamics of liquid sulphur dioxide have been studied over a wide temperature range and in solution. The optically heterodyne-detected and spatially masked optical Kerr effect (OKE) has been used to record the anisotropic and isotropic third-order responses, respectively. Analysis of the anisotropic response reveals two components, an ultrafast nonexponential relaxation and a slower exponential relaxation. The slower component is well described by the Stokes-Einstein-Debye equation for diffusive orientational relaxation. The simple form of the temperature dependence and the agreement between collective (OKE) and single molecule (e.g., NMR) measurements of the orientational relaxation time suggests that orientational pair correlation is not significant in this liquid. The relative contributions of intermolecular interaction-induced and single-molecule orientational dynamics to the ultrafast part of the spectral density are discussed. Single-molecule librational-orientational dynamics appear to dominate the ultrafast OKE response of liquid SO2. The temperature-dependent OKE data are transformed to the frequency domain to yield the Raman spectral density for the low-frequency intermolecular modes. These are bimodal with the lowest-frequency component arising from diffusive orientational relaxation and a higher-frequency component connected with the ultrafast time-domain response. This component is characterized by a shift to higher frequency at lower temperature. This result is analyzed in terms of a harmonic librational oscillator model, which describes the data accurately. The observed spectral shifts with temperature are ascribed to increasing intermolecular interactions with increasing liquid density. Overall, the dynamics of liquid SO2 are found to be well described in terms of molecular orientational relaxation which is controlled over every relevant time range by intermolecular interactions.  相似文献   

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