Two-State Theory of the Structure of Water
- 1 April 1965
- journal article
- research article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 42 (7) , 2563-2576
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1696333
Abstract
A new model of the structure of water is proposed. This model is based on the existence in water of puckered hexagonal rings similar to those in ice. In water, these rings are assumed to coexist in two structures: an open‐packed icelike structure optimum for forminghydrogen bonds between rings, and a close‐packed structure in which the molecules occupy a nearly complete body‐centered cubic structure. Mole fractions and volumes consistant with both the specific volume and the observed radial distribution curve of water are obtained. The structure of water is estimated to be approximately 60% icelike at 0°C and 30% icelike at 100°C. The corresponding fractional amount of hydrogen bonding at 0°C is found to be 82% in good agreement with recent estimates from Raman spectral observations. A simple two‐state expression for the expansivity is shown to agree with the observed thermal expansion of water over the temperature range 0° to 100°C. The lattice component (and therefore, at 4°C, the magnitude of the relaxational or configurational component) is 1.634×10−3/C°. Using these values, estimates of various other two‐state thermodynamic parameters are obtained. Both the specific heat and compressibility of water are found to be approximately 50% structural over the temperature range.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Structure of Water and Hydrophobic Bonding in Proteins. I. A Model for the Thermodynamic Properties of Liquid WaterThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1962
- A Simplified Model for the Structure of WaterBulletin of the Chemical Society of Japan, 1961
- Pauling's Model and the Thermodynamic Properties of WaterThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1961
- Thermal Conductivity of Water at High PressuresThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1959
- On the Pressure Dependence of Sound Absorption in LiquidsThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1956
- Effect of Pressure on Sound Propagation in WaterJournal of Applied Physics, 1955
- The Velocity of Sound in Water as a Function of Temperature and PressureThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1954
- On the Correlation between Structure and Some Properties of Water.Acta Chemica Scandinavica, 1954
- The Origin of Ultrasonic Absorption in WaterPhysical Review B, 1948
- A Theory of Water and Ionic Solution, with Particular Reference to Hydrogen and Hydroxyl IonsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1933