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Understanding temperature modulated calorimetry through studies of a model system

Temperature Modulated calorimetry is widely used but still raises some fundamental questions. In this paper we study a model system as a test sample to address some of them. The model has a nontrivial spectrum of relaxation times. We investigate temperature modulated calorimetry at constant average temperature to precise the meaning of the frequency-dependent heat capacity, its relation with entropy production, and how such measurements can observe the aging of a glassy sample leading to a time-dependent heat capacity. The study of the Kovacs effect for an out-of-equilibrium system shows how temperature modulated calorimetry could contribute to the understanding of this memory effect. Then we compare measurements of standard scanning calorimetry and temperature-modulated calorimetry and show how the two methods are complementary because they do not observe the same features. While it can probe the time scales of energy transfers in a system, even in the limit of low frequency temperature modulated calorimetry does not probe some relaxation phenomena which can be measured by scanning calorimetry, as suggested by experiments with glasses.

preprint2022arXivOpen access
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