Supercooled Liquid Dynamics Studied via Shear-Mechanical Spectroscopy
Claudio Maggi, Bo Jakobsen, Tage Christensen, N. B. Olsen, Jeppe C., Dyre

TL;DR
This study measures the shear modulus of five glass-forming liquids across frequencies to analyze their dynamic behavior, testing the validity of time-temperature superposition and the shoving model, revealing different relaxation processes.
Contribution
It provides new shear-mechanical spectra data for five liquids and investigates the applicability of TTS and the shoving model to these materials.
Findings
TTS applies to pentaphenyl trimethyl trisiloxane and 1,2-propanediol.
Evidence of a mechanical β process in three other liquids.
Shear-loss power law exponent is around 0.4, above the conjectured 0.5.
Abstract
We report dynamical shear-modulus measurements for five glass-forming liquids (pentaphenyl trimethyl trisiloxane, diethyl phthalate, dibutyl phthalate, 1,2-propanediol, and m-touluidine). The shear-mechanical spectra are obtained by the piezoelectric shear-modulus gauge (PSG) method. This technique allows one to measure the shear modulus ( Pa) of the liquid within a frequency range from 1 mHz to 10 kHz. We analyze the frequency-dependent response functions to investigate whether time-temperature superposition (TTS) is obeyed. We also study the shear-modulus loss-peak position and its high-frequency part. It has been suggested that when TTS applies, the high-frequency side of the imaginary part of the dielectric response decreases like a power law of the frequency with an exponent -1/2. This conjecture is analyzed on the basis of the shear mechanical data. We find that…
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