Anomalies of Liquid Water
- 1 May 1982
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English
- Vol. 21 (5) , 315-329
- https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.198203153
Abstract
Water at low temperatures (T < 300 K) reveals a multitude of unusual physico‐chemical properties, which originate from the strong directivity of the hydrogen bonds. This directivity forces the molecules into a tetrahedral arrangement of first neighbors and thus leads to a poor packing efficiency. All anomalies of the liquid become more pronounced in the metastable range below the melting pressure curve. In the following article, methods for the investigation of the supercooled range are presented. A few anomalous static and dynamic properties are described and compared with the properties of normal liquids. The experimental results are discussed in the context of computer simulations and the more recent theories on cold water. It can be concluded that the anomalies of water, for instance the density maximum of the liquid phase and the initial decrease in viscosity with pressure, are confined to the pT‐range: T < 300 K, p ≲ 200 MPa. At these pressures, lowering the temperature leads to an unexpected behavior of almost all physical properties. They seem to approach a phase transition at T ≃ (TM − 50 K), the nature of which has not yet been fully characterized. This phenomenon has hitherto been observed only in supercooled water.—In the future it will be possible to use supercooled aqueous solutions for kinetic studies, thus expanding the available dynamic range for the investigation of aqueous solutions considerably.Keywords
This publication has 168 references indexed in Scilit:
- Molecular Self‐Organization and the Origin of LifeAngewandte Chemie International Edition in English, 1981
- Inclusion of reaction fields in molecular dynamics. Application to liquid waterFaraday Discussions of the Chemical Society, 1978
- Molecular dynamics studies of hydrogen-bonded liquidsFaraday Discussions of the Chemical Society, 1978
- Dielectric constant of liquid ammonia from -35 to + 50.deg. and its influence on the association between solvated electrons and cationThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1975
- Pressure-Volume-Temperature Relations in Solutions. V. The Energy-Volume Coefficients of Carbon Tetrachloride, Water and Ethylene GlycolJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1941
- The Entropy of Deuterium Oxide and the Third Law of Thermodynamics. Heat Capacity of Deuterium Oxide from 15 to 298°K. The Melting Point and Heat of FusionJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1936
- The Entropy of Water and the Third Law of Thermodynamics. The Heat Capacity of Ice from 15 to 273°K.Journal of the American Chemical Society, 1936
- THE HEAT CAPACITIES OF ETHYL AND HEXYL ALCOHOLS FROM 16°K. TO 298°K. AND THE CORRESPONDING ENTROPIES AND FREE ENERGIESJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1929
- THERMAL DATA ON ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. IV. THE HEAT CAPACITIES, ENTROPIES AND FREE ENERGIES OF NORMAL PROPYL ALCOHOL, ETHYL ETHER AND DULCITOLJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1926
- THERMAL DATA ON ORGANIC COMPOUNDS I. THE HEAT CAPACITIES AND FREE ENERGIES OF METHYL, ETHYL AND NORMAL-BUTYL ALCOHOLSJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1925