Molecular dynamics study of liquid crystals by 2H and 14N NMR spectroscopy

Deuterium (2H) and Nitrogen 14 (14N) NMR spectroscopy were used to investigate the molecular dynamics in one thermotropic and one lyotropic liquid crystal. Quantitative analyses of deuterium spectral densities of motion for three deuteron sites (ring and C[alpha]) at two different Larmor frequencies...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chen, Yanbin
Other Authors: Dong, Ronald Y (Physics and Astronomy)
Language:en_US
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/222
Description
Summary:Deuterium (2H) and Nitrogen 14 (14N) NMR spectroscopy were used to investigate the molecular dynamics in one thermotropic and one lyotropic liquid crystal. Quantitative analyses of deuterium spectral densities of motion for three deuteron sites (ring and C[alpha]) at two different Larmor frequencies (46 and 61.4MHz) are reported in the smectic A and C* phases of (S)-[4-(2-methylbutyl)phenyl]-4’-octylbiphenyl carboxylate (8BEF5-d15), a partially deuterated smectogen. 2H spectral densities for two deuteron sites on the chain (C1 and C2/C3) at Larmor frequency 61.4MHz and 14N spectral densities for the head group (NH4+) of the molecule decylammonium chloride (DACl) at 28.9MHz are reported in the lamellar phase of a partially deuterated sample, DACl-d11/H2O binary system. The motional model is the small step rotational diffusion for reorientations plus internal rotations in the strong collision limit. In the chiral C* phase of the first molecule, 8BEF5-d15, the helical axes are aligned along the external magnetic field and the deuteron spins appear to relax in a macroscopically uniaxial environment. After including the molecular tilt, the reorientation processes in the SmC* phase are found to have higher activation energies than those in the smectic A phase. Applying the same motional models to the lyotropic molecule DACl-d11, the tumbling motion of the long axis of the molecule in the aggregates is more rigorous in comparison to the molecular spinning motion. The similarity of deuterium spectral densities from the C1 and C2/C3 sites may indicate a relatively rigid unit of C1-C2-C3-C4 in the backbone.