Abstract

Temperature-dependent rotational diffusion of tetraethylene glycol dimethyl ether (TEGDE) is measured by optical heterodyne-detected optical Kerr effect (OHD-OKE) spectroscopy and compared to previous measurements of rotational diffusion as a function of water content. Both types of data, temperature-dependent and hydration-dependent, follow the Debye-Stokes-Einstein (DSE) equation and agree quantitatively with hydrodynamic calculations. Of particular importance is the result that both types of data show nearly identical dependence on the viscosity divided by the temperature (η/T). We also compare the translational diffusion constants as previously measured by pulsed field gradient spin-echo (PFG-SE) NMR as a function of both temperature and water content. The temperature-dependent data follow the Stokes-Einstein (SE) equation. Similar to the rotation, the low water content mixtures obey the SE equation and show the same proportionality to η/T as the temperature-dependent data. At higher water fractions, the data do not obey the SE equation. The principal results are that the influence of temperature on dry TEGDE orientational relaxation is the same as the influence of water content at fixed temperature, and that the influence of temperature on translational diffusion of dry TEGDE is the same as the influence of water content over a range of relatively low water concentrations. The results demonstrate that there are no large TEGDE structural changes or specific, long-lived water-polyether interactions in the solutions over the entire concentration range.

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