Heating Glass-Forming Materials by Time Dependent Electric Fields

abstract: The disordered nature of glass-forming melts results in two features for its dynamics i.e. non-Arrhenius and non-exponential behavior. Their macroscopic properties are studied through observing spatial heterogeneity of the molecular relaxation. Experiments performed in a low-frequency rang...

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Other Authors: Pathak, Ullas (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.15785
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-157852018-06-22T03:03:21Z Heating Glass-Forming Materials by Time Dependent Electric Fields abstract: The disordered nature of glass-forming melts results in two features for its dynamics i.e. non-Arrhenius and non-exponential behavior. Their macroscopic properties are studied through observing spatial heterogeneity of the molecular relaxation. Experiments performed in a low-frequency range tracks the flow of energy in time on slow degrees of freedom and transfer to the vibrational heat bath of the liquid, as is the case for microwave heating. High field measurements on supercooled liquids result in generation of fictive temperatures of the absorbing modes which eventually result in elevated true bath temperatures. The absorbed energy allows us to quantify the changes in the 'configurational', real sample, and electrode temperatures. The slow modes absorb energy on the structural relaxation time scale causing the increase of configurational temperature resulting in the rise of dielectric loss. Time-resolved high field dielectric relaxation experiments show the impact of 'configurational heating' for low frequencies of the electric field and samples that are thermally clamped to a thermostat. Relevant thermal behavior of monohydroxy alcohols is considerably different from the cases of simple non-associating liquids, due to their distinct origins of the prominent dielectric loss. Monohydroxy alcohols display very small changes due to observed nonthermal effects without increasing sample temperature. These changes have been reflected in polymers in our measurements. Dissertation/Thesis Pathak, Ullas (Author) Richert, Ranko (Advisor) Dai, Lenore (Advisor) Nielsen, Davi (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Chemical engineering Chemistry Physics eng 87 pages M.S. Chemical Engineering 2012 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.15785 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2012
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Chemical engineering
Chemistry
Physics
spellingShingle Chemical engineering
Chemistry
Physics
Heating Glass-Forming Materials by Time Dependent Electric Fields
description abstract: The disordered nature of glass-forming melts results in two features for its dynamics i.e. non-Arrhenius and non-exponential behavior. Their macroscopic properties are studied through observing spatial heterogeneity of the molecular relaxation. Experiments performed in a low-frequency range tracks the flow of energy in time on slow degrees of freedom and transfer to the vibrational heat bath of the liquid, as is the case for microwave heating. High field measurements on supercooled liquids result in generation of fictive temperatures of the absorbing modes which eventually result in elevated true bath temperatures. The absorbed energy allows us to quantify the changes in the 'configurational', real sample, and electrode temperatures. The slow modes absorb energy on the structural relaxation time scale causing the increase of configurational temperature resulting in the rise of dielectric loss. Time-resolved high field dielectric relaxation experiments show the impact of 'configurational heating' for low frequencies of the electric field and samples that are thermally clamped to a thermostat. Relevant thermal behavior of monohydroxy alcohols is considerably different from the cases of simple non-associating liquids, due to their distinct origins of the prominent dielectric loss. Monohydroxy alcohols display very small changes due to observed nonthermal effects without increasing sample temperature. These changes have been reflected in polymers in our measurements. === Dissertation/Thesis === M.S. Chemical Engineering 2012
author2 Pathak, Ullas (Author)
author_facet Pathak, Ullas (Author)
title Heating Glass-Forming Materials by Time Dependent Electric Fields
title_short Heating Glass-Forming Materials by Time Dependent Electric Fields
title_full Heating Glass-Forming Materials by Time Dependent Electric Fields
title_fullStr Heating Glass-Forming Materials by Time Dependent Electric Fields
title_full_unstemmed Heating Glass-Forming Materials by Time Dependent Electric Fields
title_sort heating glass-forming materials by time dependent electric fields
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.15785
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