The static structure factor, S(Q), of liquid rubidium has been studied by neutron diffraction for temperatures up to 2000 K and pressures up to 139 bar near saturation conditions, corresponding to an expansion of the liquid from 1.46 to 0.54 gcm-3. The characteristic changes of the scattering behaviour and of the microscopic structure approaching the M-NM transition region are discussed. A comparison of these results with simple hard sphere model calculations is given.
Applying the field-cycling nuclear magnetic resonance technique, the frequency dependence of the (1)H spin-lattice relaxation rate, R1ω=T1(-1)ω, is measured for propylene glycol (PG) which is increasingly diluted with deuterated chloroform. A frequency range of 10 kHz-20 MHz and a broad temperature interval from 220 to about 100 K are covered. The results are compared to those of experiments, where glycerol and o-terphenyl are diluted with their deuterated counter-part. Reflecting intra- as well as intermolecular relaxation, the dispersion curves R1ω,x (x denotes mole fraction PG) allow to extract the rotational time constant τrot(T, x) and the self-diffusion coefficient D(T, x) in a single experiment. The Stokes-Einstein-Debye (SED) relation is tested in terms of the quantity D(T, x) τrot(T, x) which provides a measure of an effective hydrodynamic radius or equivalently of the spectral separation of the translational and the rotational relaxation contribution. In contrast to o-terphenyl, glycerol and PG show a spectral separation much larger than suggested by the SED relation. In the case of PG/chloroform mixtures, not only an acceleration of the PG dynamics is observed with increasing dilution but also the spectral separation of rotational and translational relaxation contributions continuously decreases. Finally, following a behavior similar to that of o-terphenyl already at about x = 0.6; i.e., while D(T, x) τrot(T, x) in the mixture is essentially temperature independent, it strongly increases with x signaling thus a change of translational-rotational coupling. This directly reflects the dissolution of the hydrogen-bond network and thus a change of solution structure.
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