Reorientational relaxation of a linear probe molecule in a simple glassy liquid

Phys Rev E Stat Phys Plasmas Fluids Relat Interdiscip Topics. 2000 Jun;61(6 Pt B):6934-49. doi: 10.1103/physreve.61.6934.

Abstract

Within the mode-coupling theory (MCT) for the evolution of structural relaxation in glass-forming liquids, correlation functions and susceptibility spectra are calculated characterizing the rotational dynamics of a top-down symmetric dumbbell molecule, consisting of two fused hard spheres immersed in a hard-sphere system. It is found that for sufficiently large dumbbell elongations, the dynamics of the probe molecule follows the same universal glass-transition scenario as known from the MCT results of simple liquids. The alpha-relaxation process of the angular-index j=1 response is stronger, slower, and less stretched than the one for j=2, in qualitative agreement with results found by dielectric-loss and depolarized-light-scattering spectroscopy for some supercooled liquids. For sufficiently small elongations, the reorientational relaxation occurs via large-angle flips, and the standard scenario for the glass-transition dynamics is modified for odd-j responses due to precursor phenomena of a nearby type-A MCT transition. In this case, a major part of the relaxation outside the transient regime is described qualitatively by the beta-relaxation scaling laws, while the alpha-relaxation scaling law is strongly disturbed.