Abstract: | Stretched polyethylene has been used for several years by organic spectroscopists as a means of orienting isolated aromatic molecules. Dielectric relaxation studies are reported which consider dipolar aromatic molecules dissolved in stretched polyethylene in order to learn more about the environment of these oriented molecules. The research builds on earlier studies of the dielectric relaxation behavior of dipolar aromatic molecules dissolved in unoriented low density polyethylene. Studies demonstrate that molecules in the amorphous phase are oriented at temperatures below the glass transition, both the β and γ relaxations being orientation dependent. It is shown through studies of oriented rods that large numbers of the orientable molecules are immobilized by the oriented polyethylene and cannot relax. An essential criterion for immobilization to occur is that molecules exhibit geometrical symmetry. |