Molecular rotation and reorientation: Microscopic and hydrodynamic contributions
- 15 September 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 69 (6), 2725-2733
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.436868
Abstract
The relative roles of microscopic and hydrodynamic contributions to molecular rotation and reorientation are examined within the framework of the microscopic boundary layer theory recently proposed by the authors. The theory is applied to rough spheres, for which computer simulation data are available, and to experimental results on spherical top molecules. Attention is focused on rotational diffusion constants, the kappa parameter introduced by Kivelson e t a l., and orientational relaxation times. It is shown that, while collective effects are present and often nonnegligible, the motion of small molecules is dominated by its microscopic aspects. Experimental trends which can incorrectly suggest dominance by hydrodynamic contributions are discussed in some detail. Finally, the transition to the regime where collective effects are dominant is considered.Keywords
This publication has 44 references indexed in Scilit:
- NMR study of angular momentum relaxation in fluids. I. Compressed CF4The Journal of Chemical Physics, 1977
- Statistical Mechanics of Molecular Motion in Dense FluidsAnnual Review of Physical Chemistry, 1977
- Molecular reorientation and shear viscosity in dense liquidsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1976
- Density and temperature effects on motional dynamics of SF6 in the supercritical dense fluid regionThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1975
- Molecular dynamics of the rough sphere fluid. I. Rotational relaxationThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1975
- Long-time behavior of orientation correlation functionsPhysica, 1974
- Translational and rotational diffusion in liquids. II. Orientational single-particle correlation functionsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1974
- Viscosity of xenon and ethane in the critical regionThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1974
- Nuclear Spin Relaxation and the Collision Frequency in Dense GasesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1968
- Dielectric relaxation in solutions with large solute moleculesTransactions of the Faraday Society, 1958