Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Fractional rotational diffusion 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]

FRACTIONAL ROTATIONAL DIFFUSION AND ANOMALOUS DIELECTRIC RELAXATION IN DIPOLE SYSTEMS... [Pg.285]

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]

In the fixed axis rotation model of dielectric relaxation of polar molecules a typical member of the assembly is a rigid dipole of moment p rotating about a fixed axis through its center. The dipole is specified by the angular coordinate < ) (the azimuth) so that it constitutes a system of 1 (rotational) degree of freedom. The fractional diffusion equation for the time evolution of the probability density function W(4>, t) in configuration space is given by Eq. (52) which we write here as... [Pg.306]

In the present section, it is demonstrated how the linear response of an assembly of noninteracting polar Brownian particles to a small external field F applied parallel and perpendicular to the bias field Fo may be calculated in the context of the fractional noninertial rotational diffusion in the same manner as normal rotational diffusion [8]. In order to carry out the calculation, it is assumed that the rotational Brownian motion of a particle may be described by a fractional noninertial Fokker-Planck (Smoluchowski) equation, in which the inertial effects are neglected. Both exact and approximate solutions of this equation are presented. We shall demonstrate that the characteristic times of the normal diffusion process, namely, the integral and effective relaxation times obtained in Refs. 8, 65, and 67, allow one to evaluate the dielectric response for anomalous diffusion. Moreover, these characteristic times yield a simple analytical equation for the complex dielectric susceptibility tensor describing the anomalous relaxation of the system. The exact solution of the problem reduces to the solution of the infinite hierarchies of differential-recurrence equations for the corresponding relaxation functions. The longitudinal and transverse components of the susceptibility tensor may be calculated exactly from the Laplace transform of these relaxation functions using linear response theory [72]. [Pg.338]

As far as comparison with experimental data is concerned, the fractional Klein-Kramers model under discussion may be suitable for the explanation of dielectric relaxation of dilute solution of polar molecules (such as CHCI3, CH3CI, etc.) in nonpolar glassy solvents (such as decalin at low temperatures see, e.g., Ref. 93). Here, in contrast to the normal diffusion, the model can explain qualitatively the inertia-corrected anomalous (Cole-Cole-like) dielectric relaxation behavior of such solutions at low frequencies. However, one would expect that the model is not applicable at high frequencies (in the far-infrared region), where the librational character of the rotational motion must be taken... [Pg.397]


See other pages where Fractional rotational diffusion dielectric relaxation is mentioned: [Pg.587]    [Pg.306]    [Pg.348]    [Pg.380]   


SEARCH



Dielectric relaxation

Dielectric relaxation (continued fractional rotational diffusion

Diffuse rotation

Diffusion relaxation

Diffusion rotational

Relaxation fractional rotational diffusion

Rotational diffusivity

Rotational relaxation

© 2024 chempedia.info