Isothermal compressibility of supercooled water and evidence for a thermodynamic singularity at −45°C
- 1 August 1976
- journal article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 65 (3) , 851-858
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.433153
Abstract
Using a capillary technique for small samples, the isothermal compressibility κT of water has been measured to −26°C. Accelerating increases of κT at the lower temperatures can be described by an expression of the form κT=Aεγ [where ε= (T−Ts)/Ts], which is known to describe anomalies encountered in the vicinity of a thermodynamic singularity located at Ts. The implication that the thermodynamic and certain other properties of water at lower temperatures may be decomposed into a normal component and an anomalous component which diverges at Ts=−45°C is supported by analysis of numerous other thermodynamic and relaxation data which extend into the supercooled regime. The anomalous characteristics are shown to originate primarily in the sensitivity of the volume to temperature changes, suggesting a geometrical basis for the cooperative behavior. The singularity at Ts=−45°C may be a lambda transition associated with the cooperative formation of an open hydrogen‐bonded network, but the near coincidence of Ts with the experimental homogeneous nucleation temperature suggests, as an alternative, that Ts may correspond to the limit of mechanical stability for the supercooled liquid phase.Keywords
This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- Amorphous Solid Water: A Neutron Diffraction StudyScience, 1975
- Nuclear magnetic resonance in antiferromagnetic α-RbMnCl3·2H2OThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1974
- Relaxation processes in water: Viscosity, self-diffusion, and spin-lattice relaxation. A kinetic modelThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1974
- Application of the mechanical stability condition to the prediction of the limit of superheat for normal alkanes, ether, and waterThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1973
- Self-diffusion in normal and heavy water in the range 1-45.deg.The Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1973
- Two-state thermodynamics and transport properties for water from "bond lattice" modelThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1971
- The data gap in solution chemistry: The ideal glass transition puzzleJournal of Chemical Education, 1970
- Theory of Molecular Interactions. I. Molecular Orbital Studies of Water Polymers Using a Minimal Slater-Type BasisThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1970
- Viscosity of water at various temperaturesThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1969
- Molecular-Orbital Studies of Hydrogen Bonds. An Ab Initio Calculation for Dimeric H2OThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1968