First-ever measurements provide evidence that extremely cold liquid water exists in two distinct structures that co-exist and vary in proportion dependent on temperature
By Karyn Hede,
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
September 17,
2020 -- RICHLAND,
Wash.—Supercooled water is really two liquids in one. That’s the conclusion
reached by a research team at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest
National Laboratory after making the first-ever measurements of liquid water at
temperatures much colder than its typical freezing point.
The finding,
published today in the journal Science, provides long-sought
experimental data to explain some of the bizarre behavior water exhibits at
extremely cold temperatures found in outer space and at the far reaches of
Earth’s own atmosphere. Until now, liquid water at the most extreme possible
temperatures has been the subject of competing theories and conjecture. Some
scientists have asked whether it is even possible for water to truly exist as a
liquid at temperatures as low as -117.7 F (190 K) or whether the odd behavior
is just water rearranging on its inevitable path to a solid.
The argument
matters because understanding water, which covers 71 percent of the Earth’s
surface, is critical to understanding how it regulates our environment, our
bodies and life itself.
“We showed
that liquid water at extremely cold temperatures is not only relatively stable,
it exists in two structural motifs,” said Greg Kimmel, a chemical physicist at
PNNL. “The findings explain a long-standing controversy over whether or not
deeply supercooled water always crystallizes before it can equilibrate. The
answer is: no.”
Supercooled
water: a tale of two liquids
You’d think we
understand water by now. It’s one of the most abundant and most studied
substances on the planet. But despite its seeming simplicity—two atoms of
hydrogen and one atom of oxygen per molecule—H2O is deceptively
complicated.
It is
surprisingly difficult for water to freeze just below its melting point: water
resists freezing unless it has something to get it started, like dust or some
other solid to cling to. In pure water, it takes an energetic nudge to jostle
the molecules into the special arrangement needed to freeze. And it expands
when it freezes, which is weird behavior compared with other liquids. But that
weirdness is what sustains life on Earth. If ice cubes sank or water vapor in
the atmosphere didn’t retain warmth, life on Earth as we know it wouldn’t
exist.
Water’s weird
behavior has kept chemical physicists Bruce Kay and Greg Kimmel occupied for
more than 25 years. Now, they and postdoctoral scientists Loni Kringle and
Wyatt Thornley have accomplished a milestone that they hope will expand our
understanding of the contortions liquid water molecules can make.
Various models
have been proposed to explain water’s unusual properties. The new data obtained
using a sort of stop-motion “snapshot” of supercooled water shows that it can
condense into a high-density, liquid-like structure. This higher density form
co-exists with a lower-density structure that is more in line with the typical
bonding expected for water. The proportion of high-density liquid decreases
rapidly as the temperature goes from -18.7 F (245 K) to -117.7 F (190 K),
supporting predictions of “mixture” models for supercooled water.
Kringle and
Thornley used infrared spectroscopy to spy on the water molecules trapped in a
kind of stop motion when a thin film of ice got zapped with a laser, creating a
supercooled liquid water for a few fleeting nanoseconds.
“A key
observation is that all of the structural changes were reversible and
reproducible,” said Kringle, who performed many of the experiments.
Graupel: it’s
supercooled water!
This research
may help explain graupel, the fluffy pellets that sometimes fall during
cool-weather storms. Graupel forms when a snowflake interacts with supercooled
liquid water in the upper atmosphere.
“Liquid water
in the upper atmosphere is deeply cooled,” says Kay, a PNNL lab fellow and
expert in the physics of water. “When it encounters a snowflake it rapidly
freezes and then in the right conditions, falls to Earth. It’s really the only
time most people will experience the effects of supercooled water.”
These studies
may also help understand how liquid water can exist on very cold
planets—Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune—in our solar system, and beyond.
Supercooled water vapor also creates the beautiful tails that trail behind
comets.
Water molecule
gymnastics
Here on Earth,
a better understanding of the contortions water can perform when placed in a
tight situation, such as a single water molecule wedged into a protein, could
help scientists design new medicines.
“There isn't a
lot of space for the water molecules that surround individual proteins,” said
Kringle. “This research could shed light on how liquid water behaves in closely
packed environments.”
Thornley noted
that “in future studies, we can use this new technique to follow the molecular
rearrangements underlying a broad range of chemical reactions.”
There is still
much to be learned, and these measurements will help lead the way to a better
understanding of the most abundant life-giving liquid on Earth.
This work was
supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science. The pulsed laser
and infrared spectroscopy measurements were performed at EMSL, the
Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory, a DOE Office of Science user
facility located at PNNL.
https://www.pnnl.gov/news-media/supercooled-water-stable-liquid-scientists-show-first-time
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