Acoustic, thermal and flow processes in a water filled nanoporous glasses by time-resolved optical spectroscopy
R. Cucini, A. Taschin, P. Bartolini, R. Torre

TL;DR
This study uses time-resolved optical spectroscopy to investigate acoustic, thermal, and flow processes in water-filled nanoporous Vycor glass, demonstrating hydrodynamic behavior at nanoscales and analyzing the interplay of heat and mass transport.
Contribution
It applies an extended hydrodynamic model to interpret experimental data on nanoporous water, revealing detailed insights into coupled thermal and flow dynamics at nanoscale.
Findings
Hydrodynamic model successfully describes acoustic, thermal, and flow processes.
Evidence of interplay between heat and mass transport inside nanopores.
Extraction of physical parameters of water-Vycor system from experimental data.
Abstract
We present heterodyne detected transient grating measurements on water filled Vycor 7930 in the range of temperature 20 - 90 degrees C. This experimental investigation enables to measure the acoustic propagation, the average density variation due the liquid flow and the thermal diffusion in this water filled nano-porous material. The data have been analyzed with the model of Pecker and Deresiewicz which is an extension of Biot model to account for the thermal effects. In the whole temperature range the data are qualitatively described by this hydrodynamic model that enables a meaningful insight of the different dynamic phenomena. The data analysis proves that the signal in the intermediate and long time-scale can be mainly addressed to the water dynamics inside the pores. We proved the existence of a peculiar interplay between the mass and the heat transport that produces a flow and…
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