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Continuous time random walk dielectric relaxation

Chapter 8 by W. T. Coffey, Y. P. Kalmykov, and S. V. Titov, entitled Fractional Rotational Diffusion and Anomalous Dielectric Relaxation in Dipole Systems, provides an introduction to the theory of fractional rotational Brownian motion and microscopic models for dielectric relaxation in disordered systems. The authors indicate how anomalous relaxation has its origins in anomalous diffusion and that a physical explanation of anomalous diffusion may be given via the continuous time random walk model. It is demonstrated how this model may be used to justify the fractional diffusion equation. In particular, the Debye theory of dielectric relaxation of an assembly of polar molecules is reformulated using a fractional noninertial Fokker-Planck equation for the purpose of extending that theory to explain anomalous dielectric relaxation. Thus, the authors show how the Debye rotational diffusion model of dielectric relaxation of polar molecules (which may be described in microscopic fashion as the diffusion limit of a discrete time random walk on the surface of the unit sphere) may be extended via the continuous-time random walk to yield the empirical Cole-Cole, Cole-Davidson, and Havriliak-Negami equations of anomalous dielectric relaxation from a microscopic model based on a... [Pg.586]

Another most important question in anomalous dielectric relaxation is the physical interpretation of the parameters a and v in the various relaxation formulas and what are the physical conditions that give rise to these parameters. Here we shall give a reasonably convincing derivation of the fractional Smoluckowski equation from the discrete orientation model of dielectric relaxation. In the continuum limit of the orientation sites, such an approach provides a justification for the fractional diffusion equation used in the explanation of the Cole-Cole equation. Moreover, the fundamental solution of that equation for the free rotator will, by appealing to self-similarity, provide some justification for the neglect of spatial derivatives of higher order than the second in the Kramers-Moyal expansion. In order to accomplish this, it is first necessary to explain the concept of the continuous-time random walk (CTRW). [Pg.294]

We remark that if the jump length distance is also a Levy process, the mean-square displacement does not exist which has led to conceptual difficulties in applying this process to dielectric relaxation. Using these simplifications, one can identify two specialized forms of a continuous time random walk ... [Pg.296]

Relaxation functions for fractal random walks are fundamental in the kinetics of complex systems such as liquid crystals, amorphous semiconductors and polymers, glass forming liquids, and so on [73]. Relaxation in these systems may deviate considerably from the exponential (Debye) pattern. An important task in dielectric relaxation of complex systems is to extend [74,75] the Debye theory of relaxation of polar molecules to fractional dynamics, so that empirical decay functions for example, the stretched exponential of Williams and Watts [76] may be justified in terms of continuous-time random walks. [Pg.176]

We shall now almost exclusively concentrate on the fractal time random walk excluding inertial effects and the discrete orientation model of dielectric relaxation. We shall demonstrate how in the diffusion limit this walk will yield a fractional generalization of the Debye-Frohlich model. Just as in the conventional Debye relaxation, a fractional generalization of the Debye-Frohlich model may be derived from a number of very different models of the relaxation process (compare the approach of Refs. 22, 23, 28 and 34—36). The advantage of using an approach based on a kinetic equation such as the fractional Fokker-Planck equation (FFPE) however is that such a method may easily be extended to include the effects of the inertia of the dipoles, external potentials, and so on. Moreover, the FFPE (by use of a theorem of operational calculus generalized to fractional exponents and continued fraction methods) clearly indicates how many existing results of the classical theory of the Brownian motion may be extended to include fractional dynamics. [Pg.299]


See other pages where Continuous time random walk dielectric relaxation is mentioned: [Pg.419]    [Pg.176]    [Pg.50]   


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Continuous time

Continuous time random walk

Dielectr relaxation time

Dielectric relaxation

Dielectric relaxation (continued

Random walk

Random walks dielectric relaxation

Randomization time

Relaxation Continuous

Relaxation —continued

Walk

Walking

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