Abstract

AbstractPhoton correlation spectroscopy is employed to study the slowly relaxing density and anisotropy fluctuations in bulk atactic polystyrene as a function of temperature from 100 to 160°C and pressure from 1 to 1330 bar. The light‐scattering relaxation function is well described by the empirical function ϕ(t) = exp[−(t/τ)β], where for polystyrene β = 0.34. The average relaxation time is determined at each temperature and pressure according to 〈τ〉 = (τ/β)Γ(1/β) where Γ(x) is the gamma function. The data can be described by the empirical relation 〈τ〉 = 〈τ〉0 exp[(A + BP)/R(T − T0)] where R is the gas constant and T0 is the ideal glass transition temperature. The empirical constant A/R is in good agreement with that determined from the viscosity or the dielectric relaxation data (1934 K). The empirical constant B can be interpreted as the activation volume for the fundamental unit involved in the relaxation and is found to be comparable to one styrene subunit (100 mL/mol). The quantity B appears to be a weak function of temperature. The use of pressure as a tool in the study of light scattering near the glass transition now has been established.

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