Abstract

ABSTRACTSize effects play an important role in structural phase transitions, melting transitions, in martensitic materials, glass transitions, etc. Very often the question arises, whether a measured size effect originates from the geometrical confinement itself, or if it appears due to the interaction with the limiting surface. Using dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) technique we have studied various microphase segregated polymers, molecular glass forming liquids and supercooled water confined in nanoporous silica as well as in biological tissues. Here we show on some selected examples that DMA measurements can be used to study relaxation processes in detail and to disentangle in favourable cases pure pore size effects from effects that are induced by the confining surface.

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