Metastable phase equilibria in the ice II stability field. A Raman study of synthetic high-density water inclusions in quartz
Microthermometric measurements of a synthetic high-density (984 kg m −3 ) water inclusion in quartz revealed that only part of the super-cooled liquid water (L) transforms to solid ice I h upon ice nucleation (L → ice I h + L). While ice nucleation occurs in the ice I h stability field at −41 °C and...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP 2019, Vol.21 (35), p.19554-19566 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Microthermometric measurements of a synthetic high-density (984 kg m
−3
) water inclusion in quartz revealed that only part of the super-cooled liquid water (L) transforms to solid ice I
h
upon ice nucleation (L → ice I
h
+ L). While ice nucleation occurs in the ice I
h
stability field at −41 °C and 28 MPa the pressure increases instantaneously to 315 MPa into the ice II stability field. At this point, both phases, liquid water and ice I
h
are metastable. The coexistence of these two phases was confirmed by Raman spectroscopy and could be traced down to −80 °C. The pressure along this low-temperature metastable extension of the ice I
h
melting curve was determined by means of the frequency shift of the ice I
h
peak position using both the O-H stretching band around 3100 cm
−1
and the lattice translational band around 220 cm
−1
. At −80 °C and 466 MPa the super-cooled ice I
h
melting curve encounters the homogeneous nucleation limit (
T
H
) and the remaining liquid water transformed either to metastable ice IV (ice I
h
+ L → ice I
h
+ ice IV) or occasionally to metastable ice III (ice I
h
+ L → ice I
h
+ ice III). The nucleation of ice IV resulted in a pressure drop of about 180 MPa. Upon subsequent heating the pressure develops along a slightly negatively sloped ice I
h
-ice IV equilibrium line terminating in a triple point at −32.7 °C and 273 MPa, where ice IV melts to liquid water (ice I
h
+ ice IV → ice I
h
+ L). Hitherto existing experimental data of the ice IV melting curve (ice IV → L) were found to be in line with the observed ice I
h
-ice IV-liquid triple point. If, on the other hand, ice III nucleated at −80 °C (instead of ice IV) the associated pressure drop was about 260 MPa. The ice I
h
-ice III-liquid triple point was determined at −22.0 °C and 207 MPa (ice I
h
+ ice III → ice I
h
+ L), which is in agreement with previous experimental data.
A metastable ice I
h
-ice IV equilibrium curve terminating in a metastable triple point (ice I
h
-ice IV-liquid) has been determined within the stability range of ice II. |
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ISSN: | 1463-9076 1463-9084 |
DOI: | 10.1039/c9cp03647d |