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1.
Phys Rev Lett ; 125(6): 065503, 2020 Aug 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32845696

RESUMO

Glycerol pressurized to 2 kbar and hyperquenched from the bulk liquid at rates of about -10 000 K/s, has been frozen to an extreme out-of-equilibrium state. As compared to conventionally cooled melts, the resulting material exhibits lower orientational correlations, enabling the observation of a secondary relaxation peak in the ambient-pressure dielectric response. The hyperquenching rather than the pressurizing part of the preparation protocol induces the observed structural changes. These vanish entirely only well above the glass transition temperature of the equilibrium liquid and are evidence for strong similarities between hyperquenched and vapor-deposited glass formers.

2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(49): 17402-7, 2014 Dec 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25422420

RESUMO

We present the discovery of an unusually large isotope effect in the structural relaxation and the glass transition temperature Tg of water. Dielectric relaxation spectroscopy of low-density as well as of vapor-deposited amorphous water reveal Tg differences of 10 ± 2 K between H2O and D2O, sharply contrasting with other hydrogen-bonded liquids for which H/D exchange increases Tg by typically less than 1 K. We show that the large isotope effect and the unusual variation of relaxation times in water at low temperatures can be explained in terms of quantum effects. Thus, our findings shed new light on water's peculiar low-temperature dynamics and the possible role of quantum effects in its structural relaxation, and possibly in dynamics of other low-molecular-weight liquids.

3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 110(44): 17720-5, 2013 Oct 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24101518

RESUMO

The glassy states of water are of common interest as the majority of H2O in space is in the glassy state and especially because a proper description of this phenomenon is considered to be the key to our understanding why liquid water shows exceptional properties, different from all other liquids. The occurrence of water's calorimetric glass transition of low-density amorphous ice at 136 K has been discussed controversially for many years because its calorimetric signature is very feeble. Here, we report that high-density amorphous ice at ambient pressure shows a distinct calorimetric glass transitions at 116 K and present evidence that this second glass transition involves liquid-like translational mobility of water molecules. This "double Tg scenario" is related to the coexistence of two liquid phases. The calorimetric signature of the second glass transition is much less feeble, with a heat capacity increase at Tg,2 about five times as large as at Tg,1. By using broadband-dielectric spectroscopy we resolve loss peaks yielding relaxation times near 100 s at 126 K for low-density amorphous ice and at 110 K for high-density amorphous ice as signatures of these two distinct glass transitions. Temperature-dependent dielectric data and heating-rate-dependent calorimetric data allow us to construct the relaxation map for the two distinct phases of water and to extract fragility indices m = 14 for the low-density and m = 20-25 for the high-density liquid. Thus, low-density liquid is classified as the strongest of all liquids known ("superstrong"), and also high-density liquid is classified as a strong liquid.


Assuntos
Congelamento , Modelos Químicos , Transição de Fase , Água/química , Calorimetria , Espectroscopia de Infravermelho com Transformada de Fourier , Difração de Raios X
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