Confinement effects on glass forming liquids probed by dynamic mechanical analysis

Author(s)
Johannes Koppensteiner, Wilfried Schranz, Madalina-Roxana Puica
Abstract

Many molecular glass forming liquids show a shift of the glass transition Tg to lower temperatures when the liquid is confined into mesoporous host matrices. Two contrary explanations for this effect are given in literature: First, confinement induced acceleration of the dynamics of the molecules leads to an effective downshift of Tg increasing with decreasing pore size. Second, due to thermal mismatch between the liquid and the surrounding host matrix, negative pressure develops inside the pores with decreasing temperature, which also shifts Tg to lower temperatures. Here we present dynamic mechanical analysis measurements of the glass forming liquid salol in Vycor and Gelsil with pore sizes of d=2.6 , 5.0 and 7.5 nm. The dynamic complex elastic susceptibility data can be consistently described with the assumption of two relaxation processes inside the pores: A surface induced slowed down relaxation due to interaction with rough pore interfaces and a second relaxation within the core of the pores. This core relaxation time is reduced with decreasing pore size d , leading to a downshift of Tg?1/d in perfect agreement with recent differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) measurements. Thermal expansion measurements of empty and salol filled mesoporous samples revealed that the contribution of negative pressure to the downshift of Tg is small (

Organisation(s)
Physics of Nanostructured Materials, Physics of Functional Materials
Journal
Physical Review B
Volume
78
ISSN
1098-0121
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.78.054203
Publication date
2008
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
103015 Condensed matter
Portal url
https://ucris.univie.ac.at/portal/en/publications/confinement-effects-on-glass-forming-liquids-probed-by-dynamic-mechanical-analysis(ae1bf995-4b14-482c-a865-432f53eb23da).html