Abstract
We report both experimental and molecular simulation studies of the melting behavior of aniline confined within an activated carbon fiber having slit-shaped pores. Dielectric relaxation spectroscopy is used to determine the transition temperatures and also the dielectric relaxation times over the temperature range 240 to 340 K. For the confined system two transitions were observed, one at 298 K and a second transition at 324 K. The measured relaxation times indicate that the low temperature phase (below 298 K) is a crystalline or partially crystalline solid phase, while that above 324 K is a liquid-like phase; for the intermediate phase, in the range 298–324 K, the relaxation times are of the order 10−5s, which is typical of a hexatic phase. The melting temperature of the confined system is well above that of bulk aniline, which is 267 K. The simulations are carried out using the Grand Canonical Monte Carlo method together with Landau free energy calculations, and phase transitions are located as state points where the grand free energies of two confined phases are equal. The nature of these phases is determined by analysis of in-plane pair positional and orientational correlation functions. The simulations also show two transitions. The first is a transition from a two-dimensional hexagonal crystal phase to a hexatic phase at 296 K; the second transition is from the hexatic to a liquid-like phase at 336 K. Confinement within the slit-shaped pores appears to stabilize the hexatic phase, which is the stable phase over a wider temperature range than for quasi-two-dimensional thin films.
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