Abstract

Measurements by the pulse technique were made of the absorption of sound in the nitrobenzene—iso-octane system (Tc=30.2°C) over the full composition range, at temperatures of 30.5°C, 34.8°, and 44.8° for five frequencies between 4.5 and 16.5 Mc/sec. At the lowest frequency and at 0.3°C above the critical temperature, the absorption is anomalously large by a factor of 47; 14.6°C above Tc, the absorption is still in excess of classical predictions by a factor of 11. The data cannot be represented by a model involving only a single relaxation frequency. The Fixman theory is in reasonable, but not exact, agreement with the data with regard to functional conformity in temperature and frequency; in particular, the predicted frequency dependence, α/f2∝f−5/4, at the critical state is verified within experimental error. The Fixman theory and the data preclude anything but a simple pole at the critical temperature for the reciprocal square of κ, the exponential decay constant in the long-range correlation function. However, if it is assumed that κ2=6l−2(T/Tc−1)[1+a1(T/Tc−1)],the theory and experiment are in agreement over the full range of temperature and frequency, with a value of a1=0.0296.

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