Dynamics of Small-Molecule Glass Formers Confined in Nanopores

ORAL

Abstract

We report a comparative neutron scattering study of the molecular mobility and non-exponential relaxation of three structurally similar glass-forming liquids (isopropanol, propylene glycol, and glycerol) in bulk and confined in porous Vycor glass. Confinement reduces molecular mobility in all three liquids, and suppresses crystallization in isopropanol. High-resolution quasi-elastic neutron scattering spectra were fit to Fourier transformed Kohlrausch functions $\exp[-(t/\tau) ^{\beta}]$, describing $\alpha$-relaxation. The stretching parameter $\beta$ is roughly constant with wavevector $Q$ and temperature. Average relaxation times $\langle\tau(Q)\rangle$ are longer at lower temperatures and in confinement. They obey a power law $\langle\tau(Q)\rangle \propto Q^{-\gamma}$, where the exponent $\gamma$ is modified by both temperature and confinement. Comparison of the bulk and confined liquids lends support to the idea that structural and/or dynamical heterogeneity underlies the non-exponential relaxation of glass- formers, as widely hypothesized in the literature.

*This work was prepared under award 70NANB5H1163 from NIST, U.S. Department of Commerce. We acknowledge the support of NIST in providing the neutron research facilities used in this work.

Authors

  • Timothy Prisk

    • Indiana University Department of Physics
  • Madhusudan Tyagi

    • NIST
    • NIST Center for Neutron Research
  • Paul Sokol

    • Indiana University Department of Physics
    • Center for the Exploration of Energy and Matter, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47408
    • Department of Physics, indiana University