Bulk viscosity of CO2 from Rayleigh-Brillouin lightscattering spectroscopy at 532 nm
Abstract
Rayleigh-Brillouin scattering spectra of CO2 were measured at pressures ranging from 0.5 to 4~bar, and temperatures from 257 to 355~K using green laser light (wavelength 532~nm, scattering angle of 55.7). These spectra were compared to two lineshape models, which take the bulk viscosity as a parameter. One model applies to the kinetic regime, i.e. low pressures, while the second model uses the continuum, hydrodynamic approach and takes the rotational relaxation time as a parameter, which translates into the bulk viscosity. We do not find a significant dependence of the bulk viscosity with pressure or temperature. At pressures where both models apply we find a consistent value of the ratio of bulk viscosity over shear viscosity ηb/ηs = 0.41 0.10. This value is four orders of magnitude smaller than the common value that is based on the damping of ultrasound, and signifies that in light scattering only relaxation of rotational modes matters, while vibrational modes remain 'frozen'.
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