Light Scattering and Pseudospinodal Curves: The Isobutyric-Acid-Water System in the Critical Region

Abstract
Intensity and linewidth measurements of light scattered by the isobutyric acid in water system are reported for various equilibrium states in the critical neighborhood of the temperature-concentration diagram. By extrapolation of these data to zero scattering angle and then to (unrealized) states below the phase separation temperature one may determine a common "pseudospinodal curve" Tsp(X) described by TcTsp(X)|XXc|1β where X is the concentration, and we find β0.37±0.04. As expected on the grounds of the homogeneity hypotheses, the value of β is essentially the same as the previously observed value of the exponent β for the coexistence curve. Empirical equations of the form IC,01[TTsp(X)]γ and D[TTsp(X)]γ* are used to effect the extrapolations to determine Tsp(X). Here IC,0 and D are the extrapolated zero-angle scattering intensity and the diffusion coefficient, while γ and γ* are corresponding critical exponents. We show theoretically, however, that a value β12 is inconsistent with the general validity of these empirical formulas, which should thus be discarded as over-all representations of the variations of D and IC,0. A tentative test is made of a more general scaling equation for IC,0 by a convenient plot. Moderate success is obtained. The measurements confirm the exponent values γ=1.24±0.03 and γ*=0.67±0.03. The distinction between pseudospinodal curves, determined by extrapolation from stable thermodynamics states, and a true spinodal curve which (if it exists) can only be observed by measurements on metastable states, is emphasized.