Abstract

The nitroxide C9H16NO2 (tano) forms channel inclusion compounds with a large range of linear chains or slightly branched molecules. All of them present disorder phenomena of the guest chains in the channels of the structure, but also of the host matrix molecules from one chiral form to the other. The evolution of this disorder as a function of the temperature is accompanied by one or two phase transitions above 100 K. The incoherent quasielastic neutron scattering (IQNS) technique was used to study the motion of the tano molecules for the tano/1-bromohexadecane and the tano/1-bromodecane systems in their low, intermediate and high temperature phases. The experiments were carried out on a polycrystalline sample at the Institut Laue–Langevin in Grenoble using the time-focusing time-of-flight spectrometer IN6 with a temperature ranging from 103 K to 300 K. The motion of the guest chains also was shown. The results are examined in terms of the general model proposed in an earlier IQNS study of other tano/alkane compounds with shorter included chains and the original features associated with the chain length are discussed.

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