Abstract

AbstractTwo new techniques, amplitude modulation (AM) and frequency modulation (FM) of an electric field, are developed for the light‐scattering study of polymer solutions under ac electric fields. The AM technique makes it possible to observe accurately the frequency dependence of the intensity changes of scattered light due to the electric field. The FM one allows us to obtain directly the frequency derivative of the intensity change. The techniques are applied to DNA, poly(acrylic acid), and tobacco mosaic virus in the frequency range from 10 Hz to 100 kHz. A low‐frequency relaxation is found for both DNA and poly(acrylic acid). The obsersved relaxation time of DNA agrees with that in the dielectric relaxation of DNA, which has been attributed to the rotation of the molecule with a quasipermanent dipole. In the case of poly(acrylic acid), the relaxation strength increases with increasing degree of neutralization. TMV at a concentration of 0.1% exhibits a negative relaxation at low frequencies, which indicates the rotation of TMV aggregate with a permanent dipole along its minor axis.

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