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Abstract
Local molecular ordering in liquids has attracted a lot of interest from researchers investigating crystallization, but is still poorly understood on the molecular scale. Classical nucleation theory (CNT), a macroscopic thermodynamic description of condensation, has shortcomings when dealing with clusters consisting of tens of molecules. Cluster formation and local order fluctuations in liquid media are difficult to study due to the limited spatial resolution of electron- and photon-imaging methods. We used NMR relaxometry to demonstrate the existence of dynamic clusters with short-range orientational order in nominally isotropic liquids consisting of elongated molecules. We observed clusters in liquids where the local ordering is driven by polar, steric, and hydrogen-bond interactions between the molecules. In the case of a liquid crystal, measuring the local orientational order fluctuations allowed us to observe the size of these clusters diverging when approaching the phase transition from the isotropic to the nematic phase. These fluctuations are described in terms of rotational elasticity as a consequence of the correlated reorientations of the neighbouring molecules. Our quantitative observations of the dynamic clusters in liquids, numbering about ten or fewer molecules, indicate that this is a general phenomenon in various types of liquids.
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1 Jožef Stefan Institute, Ljubljana, Slovenia (GRID:grid.11375.31) (ISNI:0000 0001 0706 0012)
2 Instituto Superior Técnico, Universidade de Lisboa, Av. Rovisco Pais, Center of Physics and Engineering of Advanced Materials, Lisboa, Portugal (GRID:grid.9983.b) (ISNI:0000 0001 2181 4263); Instituto Superior Técnico, Universidade de Lisboa, Av. Rovisco Pais, Department of Physics, Lisboa, Portugal (GRID:grid.9983.b) (ISNI:0000 0001 2181 4263)
3 UNL, CENIMAT/I3N, Departamento de Ciência Dos Materiais, Faculdade de Ciências E Tecnologia, Caparica, Portugal (GRID:grid.10772.33) (ISNI:0000000121511713)