About: Decalin is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1603 publications have been published within this topic receiving 25083 citations. The topic is also known as: bicyclo[4.4.0]decane & naphthane.
TL;DR: The dielectric loss factor and permittivity of 8-16 mol% solutions of chlorobenzene, o−dichlorobenzenes, and 1-chloronaphthalene in cis-decalin were measured by DTA as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: The dielectric loss factor and dielectric permittivity of 8–16 mol% solutions of chlorobenzene, o‐dichlorobenzene, and 1‐chloronaphthalene in cis‐decalin; 50–60 mol% mixtures of pyridine with chlorobenzene, bromobenzene, 1‐chloronaphthalene, and toluene; 50–60 mol% mixtures of tetrahydrofuran with bromobenzene and 1‐chloronaphthalene; the pure liquids cis‐decalin, o‐terphenyl, iso‐propylbenzene, propylene carbonate; and two fused salt systems, 45 mol% Ca(NO3)2–KNO3 mixture and Ca(NO3)2·4H2O have been measured from 50 Hz to 1 × 105 Hz from − 196° in the vitreous state to about 30° above their respective glass transition temperatures. The Tg's of the organic glasses have been measured by DTA. With the exception of propylene carbonate, all glasses show the presence of one secondary relaxation between − 196° and their respective Tg's either as a peak or shoulder in a tanδ–temperature plot at a single frequency, or in the dielectric loss spectrum. Arrhenius plots of the frequency of maximum loss against temper...
TL;DR: In this article, the effects of solvents and their properties on electro-spinnability of polystyrene (PS) solutions and the morphological appearance of the as-spun PS fibers were investigated qualitatively by means of a scanning electron microscope (SEM).
TL;DR: In this article, a calorimetric method of obtaining directly the fragility of liquids from the fictive temperatures of variably quenched glasses, is outlined, and the authors find that the most fragile liquids known are: glycerol, dibutylphthallate, 9-bromophenanthrene, salol, orthoterphenyl, propylene carbonate, decalin and its nitrogen derivative decahydroisoquinoline.
Abstract: A calorimetric method of obtaining directly the fragility of liquids from the fictive temperatures of variably quenched glasses, is outlined. “Steepness indexes” m, have been determined for a group of molecular liquids of diverse character, and vary in the range 50–150. The values obtained mostly agree well with those from earlier studies using dielectric relaxation, heat capacity spectroscopy, and viscosity data. In our method there is the advantage that the fragility is determined from the relaxation process that is basic to the calorimetric glass transition temperature measurement, namely, that of the enthalpy. The calorimetric measurements also yield the liquid and glass heat capacities, and entropies of fusion, permitting relationships between thermodynamic and kinetic responses to be examined simultaneously. We study glycerol, dibutylphthallate, 9-bromophenanthrene, salol, orthoterphenyl, propylene carbonate, decalin and its nitrogen derivative decahydroisoquinoline, and find the latter two to be the most fragile liquids known, m =145 and 128 respectively. Surprisingly, of the liquids studied, decalin has the smallest increase in heat capacity at the glass transition. By contrast, the strongest liquid, glycerol, has the largest increase. However, the thermodynamic fragility of decalin, assessed from the scaled rate of increase of the excess entropy above Tg, is found to be high, due to the unusually small value of the excess entropy at Tg. Conversely, the entropy-based fragility for glycerol is the lowest. Thus the correlation of kinetic and entropy-based thermodynamic fragilities reported in recent work is upheld by data from the present study, while the basis for any correlation with the jump in heat capacity itself is removed.
TL;DR: In this paper, a series of NiO−SiO2−Al2O3 catalysts were synthesized by the sol-gel method and the nature of Ni species on the support and their interaction with the support was studied.
TL;DR: In this paper, the performance of AlCNTMoNi and AlMoNi catalysts was investigated for their performance in the hydrodesulfurization (HDS) of dibenzothiophene in fuels in a batch reactor.