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Supercooled nano-droplets of water confined in hydrophobic rubber
Author(s) -
R. Neffati,
Patrick Judeinstein,
J. Rault
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
physical chemistry chemical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.053
H-Index - 239
eISSN - 1463-9084
pISSN - 1463-9076
DOI - 10.1039/d1cp03774a
Subject(s) - differential scanning calorimetry , supercooling , chemistry , glass transition , thermodynamics , molecular dynamics , natural rubber , population , atmospheric temperature range , materials science , polymer , computational chemistry , organic chemistry , physics , demography , sociology
Hydrophobic elastomers are capable of absorbing a small amount of water that forms droplets around hydrophilic sites. These systems allow the study of confinement effects by a hydrophobic environment on the dynamics and thermodynamic behaviour of water molecules. The freezing-melting properties and the dynamics of water inside nano-droplets in butyl rubber are affected, as revealed by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and deuterium nuclear magnetic resonance ( 2 H-NMR). Upon cooling down, all water crystalizes with a bimodal droplet population ( d a = 3.4 nm and d b = 4.4 nm) in a temperature range associated with the droplet size distribution. However, the melting temperature is not shifted according to the Gibbs-Thomson equation. The relative decrease of the 2 H-NMR longitudinal magnetization is not a single exponential and, by inverse Laplace transformation, it was deduced to be bimodal in agreement with the DSC measurements ( T 1,a ∼ 10 ms and T 1,b ∼ 200 ms). The deduced correlation time of molecular reorientation is longer than that of bulk water and the behaviour with temperature follows the Vogel-Fulcher-Tammann (VFT) equations with a changing fragility as the droplet size is reduced when reducing hydration.

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