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Phases of ice

The phases of ice are all possible states of matter for water as a solid. Currently, 19 phases, including both crystalline and amorphous ice, have been observed at various densities.

Log-lin pressure-temperature phase diagram of water. The Roman numerals correspond to some ice phases listed below.

Theory edit

Most liquids under increased pressure freeze at higher temperatures because the pressure helps to hold the molecules together. However, the strong hydrogen bonds in water make it different: for some pressures higher than 1 atm (0.10 MPa), water freezes at a temperature below 0 °C. Subjected to higher pressures and varying temperatures, ice can form in nineteen separate known crystalline phases. With care, at least fifteen of these phases (one of the known exceptions being ice X) can be recovered at ambient pressure and low temperature in metastable form.[1][2] The types are differentiated by their crystalline structure, proton ordering,[3] and density. There are also two metastable phases of ice under pressure, both fully hydrogen-disordered; these are Ice IV and Ice XII.

Crystal structure edit

 
Crystal structure of ice Ih. Dashed lines represent hydrogen bonds
 
The crystal structure of ice XII

The accepted crystal structure of ordinary ice was first proposed by Linus Pauling in 1935. The structure of ice Ih is the wurtzite lattice, roughly one of crinkled planes composed of tessellating hexagonal rings, with an oxygen atom on each vertex, and the edges of the rings formed by hydrogen bonds. The planes alternate in an ABAB pattern, with B planes being reflections of the A planes along the same axes as the planes themselves.[4] The distance between oxygen atoms along each bond is about 275 pm and is the same between any two bonded oxygen atoms in the lattice. The angle between bonds in the crystal lattice is very close to the tetrahedral angle of 109.5°, which is also quite close to the angle between hydrogen atoms in the water molecule (in the gas phase), which is 105°.

This tetrahedral bonding angle of the water molecule essentially accounts for the unusually low density of the crystal lattice – it is beneficial for the lattice to be arranged with tetrahedral angles even though there is an energy penalty in the increased volume of the crystal lattice. As a result, the large hexagonal rings leave almost enough room for another water molecule to exist inside. This gives naturally occurring ice its rare property of being less dense than its liquid form. The tetrahedral-angled hydrogen-bonded hexagonal rings are also the mechanism that causes liquid water to be densest at 4 °C. Close to 0 °C, tiny hexagonal ice Ih-like lattices form in liquid water, with greater frequency closer to 0 °C. This effect decreases the density of the water, causing it to be densest at 4 °C when the structures form infrequently.

In the best-known form of ice, ice Ih, the crystal structure is characterized by the oxygen atoms forming hexagonal symmetry with near tetrahedral bonding angles. This structure is stable down to −268 °C (5 K; −450 °F), as evidenced by x-ray diffraction[5] and extremely high resolution thermal expansion measurements.[6] Ice Ih is also stable under applied pressures of up to about 210 megapascals (2,100 atm) where it transitions into ice III or ice II.[7]

Amorphous ice edit

While most forms of ice are crystalline, several amorphous (or "vitreous") forms of ice also exist. Such ice is an amorphous solid form of water, which lacks long-range order in its molecular arrangement. Amorphous ice is produced either by rapid cooling of liquid water to its glass transition temperature (about 136 K or −137 °C) in milliseconds (so the molecules do not have enough time to form a crystal lattice), or by compressing ordinary ice at low temperatures. The most common form on Earth, low-density ice, is usually formed in the laboratory by a slow accumulation of water vapor molecules (physical vapor deposition) onto a very smooth metal crystal surface under 120 K. In outer space it is expected to be formed in a similar manner on a variety of cold substrates, such as dust particles.[8] By contrast, hyperquenched glassy water (HGW) is formed by spraying a fine mist of water droplets into a liquid such as propane around 80 K, or by hyperquenching fine micrometer-sized droplets on a sample-holder kept at liquid nitrogen temperature, 77 K, in a vacuum. Cooling rates above 104 K/s are required to prevent crystallization of the droplets. At liquid nitrogen temperature, 77 K, HGW is kinetically stable and can be stored for many years.

Amorphous ices have the property of suppressing long-range density fluctuations and are, therefore, nearly hyperuniform.[9] Despite the epithet "ice", classification analysis utilizing neural networks has shown that amorphous ices are glasses.[10]

Pressure-dependent states edit

 
Water phase diagram extended to negative pressures calculated with TIP4P/2005 model.[11]


Ice from a theorized superionic water may possess two crystalline structures. At pressures in excess of 50 GPa (7,300,000 psi) such superionic ice would take on a body-centered cubic structure. However, at pressures in excess of 100 GPa (15,000,000 psi) the structure may shift to a more stable face-centered cubic lattice. Some estimates suggest that at an extremely high pressure of around 1.55 TPa (225,000,000 psi), ice would develop metalic properties.[12]

Heat and entropy edit

 
An alternative formulation of the phase diagram for certain ices and other phases of water[13]

Ice, water, and water vapour can coexist at the triple point, which is exactly 273.16 K (0.01 °C) at a pressure of 611.657 Pa.[14][15] The kelvin was defined as 1/273.16 of the difference between this triple point and absolute zero,[16] though this definition changed in May 2019.[17] Unlike most other solids, ice is difficult to superheat. In an experiment, ice at −3 °C was superheated to about 17 °C for about 250 picoseconds.[18]

 
Pressure dependence of ice melting

The latent heat of melting is 5987 J/mol, and its latent heat of sublimation is 50911 J/mol. The high latent heat of sublimation is principally indicative of the strength of the hydrogen bonds in the crystal lattice. The latent heat of melting is much smaller, partly because liquid water near 0 °C also contains a significant number of hydrogen bonds. By contrast, the structure of ice II is hydrogen-ordered, which helps to explain the entropy change of 3.22 J/mol when the crystal structure changes to that of ice I. Also, ice XI, an orthorhombic, hydrogen-ordered form of ice Ih, is considered the most stable form at low temperatures.

The transition entropy from ice XIV to ice XII is estimated to be 60% of Pauling entropy based on DSC measurements.[19] The formation of ice XIV from ice XII is more favoured at high pressure.[20]

When medium-density amorphous ice is compressed, released and then heated, it releases a large amount of heat energy, unlike other water ices which return to their normal form after getting similar treatment.[21]

Hydrogen disorder edit

 
The Wurtzite structure. In Ice Ih, the oxygen atoms are arranged on the lattice points, and the hydrogen atoms are on the bonds between lattice points. Each oxygen atom has 4 neighboring ones. Note that the lattice bipartites into two subsets, here colored black and white.

The hydrogen atoms in the crystal lattice lie very nearly along the hydrogen bonds, and in such a way that each water molecule is preserved. This means that each oxygen atom in the lattice has two hydrogens adjacent to it: at about 101 pm along the 275 pm length of the bond for ice Ih. The crystal lattice allows a substantial amount of disorder in the positions of the hydrogen atoms frozen into the structure as it cools to absolute zero. As a result, the crystal structure contains some residual entropy inherent to the lattice and determined by the number of possible configurations of hydrogen positions that can be formed while still maintaining the requirement for each oxygen atom to have only two hydrogens in closest proximity, and each H-bond joining two oxygen atoms having only one hydrogen atom.[22] This residual entropy S0 is equal to 3.4±0.1 J mol−1 K−1  .[23]

Calculations edit

There are various ways of approximating this number from first principles. The following is the one used by Linus Pauling.[24][25]

Suppose there are a given number N of water molecules in an ice lattice. To compute its residual entropy, we need to count the number of configurations that the lattice can assume. The oxygen atoms are fixed at the lattice points, but the hydrogen atoms are located on the lattice edges. The problem is to pick one end of each lattice edge for the hydrogen to bond to, in a way that still makes sure each oxygen atom is bond to two hydrogen atoms.

The oxygen atoms can be divided into two sets in a checkerboard pattern, shown in the picture as black and white balls. Focus attention on the oxygen atoms in one set: there are N/2 of them. Each has four hydrogen bonds, with two hydrogens close to it and two far away. This means there are   allowed configurations of hydrogens for this oxygen atom (see Binomial coefficient). Thus, there are 6N/2 configurations that satisfy these N/2 atoms. But now, consider the remaining N/2 oxygen atoms: in general they won't be satisfied (i.e., they will not have precisely two hydrogen atoms near them). For each of those, there are 24 = 16 possible placements of the hydrogen atoms along their hydrogen bonds, of which 6 are allowed. So, naively, we would expect the total number of configurations to be

 

Using Boltzmann's entropy formula, we conclude that

 
where k is the Boltzmann constant and R is the molar gas constant. So, the molar residual entropy is  .

The same answer can be found in another way. First orient each water molecule randomly in each of the 6 possible configurations, then check that each lattice edge contains exactly one hydrogen atom. Assuming that the lattice edges are independent, then the probability that a single edge contains exactly one hydrogen atom is 1/2, and since there are 2N edges in total, we obtain a total configuration count  , as before.

Refinements edit

 
The crystal structure of ice VIII

This estimate is 'naive', as it assumes the six out of 16 hydrogen configurations for oxygen atoms in the second set can be independently chosen, which is false. More complex methods can be employed to better approximate the exact number of possible configurations, and achieve results closer to measured values. Nagle (1966) used a series summation to obtain  .[26]

As an illustrative example of refinement, consider the following way to refine the second estimation method given above. According to it, six water molecules in a hexagonal ring would allow   configurations. However, by explicit enumeration, there are actually 730 configurations. Now in the lattice, each oxygen atom participates in 12 hexagonal rings, so there are 2N rings in total for N oxygen atoms, or 2 rings for each oxygen atom, giving a refined result of  .[27]

Known phases edit

These phases are named according to the Bridgman nomenclature. The majority have only been created in the laboratory at different temperatures and pressures.[28]

Phase Year of discovery Temperature thresholds Pressure thresholds Density Crystal form Other characteristics
Ice Ih NA (always known) 0 °C (32 °F) (freezing) NA (atmospheric) 0.917 g/cm3 Hexagonal Virtually all ice in the biosphere is ice Ih, with the exception only of a small amount of ice Ic. Has a refractive index of 1.31.
Ice Ic 1943/2020[29][30] 130 and 220 K (−143 and −53 °C) (formation)/240 K (−33 °C) (conversion to Ice Ih)[31][32] NA (atmospheric) Similar to Ice Ih Diamond[33] A metastable cubic crystalline variant of ice.
Low-density amorphous ice (LDA) 1930s[34] NA (atmospheric or lower) 0.94 g/cm3 [35] NA (amorphous) Likely the most common phase in the universe.[34] More viscous than normal water.[35][36][37]
Medium-density amorphous ice (MDA) 2023[21][38] −200 °C (−328.0 °F) (freezing) NA (requires shear force) 1.06±0.06 g cm3[39] NA (amorphous) Experimental procedure generates shear force by crushing ice into powder with centimeter-wide stainless-steel balls added to its container.
High-density amorphous ice (HDA) 1984[40] <140 K (−133 °C) (normal formation); <30 K (−243.2 °C) (vapor deposition)[35][41] 77 K (−196.2 °C) (stability point)[40] At 77 K (−196.2 °C): 1.6 GPa (formation from Ih);[40] 0.5nbsp;GPa (formation from LDA)[42] 1.17 g/cm3 (ambient pressure)[40] NA (amorphous)
Very high-density amorphous ice (VHDA) 1996[43] 160 K (−113 °C) (formation from HDA); 77 K (−196.2 °C) (stability point) 1 and 2 GPa (formation at 160 K (−113 °C)); ambient (at 77 K (−196.2 °C)) 1.26 g/cm3 (77 K (−196.2 °C); ambient pressure)[44] NA (amorphous)
Ice II 1900[45] 190 K (−83 °C)-210 K (−63 °C) (formation from ice Ih); 77 K (−196.2 °C) (stability point)[45] 300 MPa[46] Rhombohedral
Ice III 1900[45] 250 K (−23 °C) (formation from liquid water); 77 K (−196.2 °C) (stability point)[45] 300 MPa (formation from liquid water)[46] 1160 kg/m3 (at 350 MPa)[47] Tetragonal Very high relative permittivity at 117. A specific gravity of 1.16 with respect to water.
Ice IV 1900[45] 190 K (−83 °C)-210 K (−63 °C) (formation from HDA); 77 K (−196.2 °C) (stability point) 810 MPa (formation from HDA) Rhombohedral Typically requires a nucleating agent to form.[48]
Ice V 1900s[49] 253 K (−20 °C) (formation from liquid water) 500 MPa (formation from liquid water) [50] 1.24 g cm3 (at 350 MPa).[51] Monoclinic Most complicated structure of all the phases. Includes 4-membered, 5-membered, 6-membered, and 8-membered rings and a total of 28 molecules in the unit cell.[52][53]
Ice VI 1912[54] 270 K (−3 °C) (formation from liquid water); 130 K (−143 °C) - 355 K (82 °C) (stability range) 1.1 GPa (formation from liquid water) [50] 1.31 g/cm3[55] Tetragonal Exhibits Debye relaxation.[56]
Ice VII 1937 [57][58] 270 K (−3 °C) (formation from ice Ih) 1.1 GPa (formation from ice Ih); 5 GPa (formation of tetragonal structure)[59] Cubic/tetragonal The hydrogen atoms' positions are disordered. Exhibits Debye relaxation. The hydrogen bonds form two interpenetrating lattices. Tetragonal form known as Ice VIIt.
Ice VIII 1966[60] <5 °C (278 K) (formation from ice VII) 2.1 GPa (formation from ice VII) Cubic Hydrogen atoms assume fixed positions.[61]
Ice IX 1968[62] 165 K (−108 °C) (formation from ice III); <140 K (−133 °C) (stability point) 200 MPa-400 MPa (stability range) 1.16 g/cm3 Tetragonal Proton-ordered equivalent to Ice III.[63] Antiferroelectric.[62]
Ice X 2022 (contested) [64] 165 K (−108 °C) (formation from ice III); <140 K (−133 °C) (stability point) 30-70 GPa (from ice VII)[65][59] Cubic Has symmetrized hydrogen bonds - a hydrogen atom is found at the center of two oxygen atoms.
Ice XI 1972[66] 72 K (−201.2 °C) (formation from ice Ic) Orthorhombic Ferroelectric. The most stable configuration of ice Ih.[67]
Ice XII 1996[68] 260 K (−13 °C; 8 °F) (formation from liquid water); 77 K (−196.2 °C; −321.1 °F) (formation from ice Ih); 183 K (−90 °C) (formation from HDA ice) 0.55 gigapascals (5,400 atm) (formation from liquid water); 0.81-1.00 GPa/min (from ice Ih); 810 MPa (formation from HDA ice) 1.3 g·cm−3 (at 127 K (−146 °C)) Tetragonal Metastable. Observed in the phase space of ice V and ice VI. A topological mix of seven- and eight-membered rings, a 4-connected net (4-coordinate sphere packing)—the densest possible arrangement without hydrogen bond interpenetration.
Ice XIII 2006[69] 130 K (−143 °C) (formation from liquid water) [70] 500 MPa (formation from liquid water)[70] Monoclinic The proton-ordered form of ice V.[70]
Ice XIV 2006[69] <118 K (−155 °C) (formation from ice XII); <140 K (−133 °C) (stability point) 1.2GPa (formation from ice XII)[70] Orthorhombic The proton-ordered form of ice XII.[70] Formation requires HCl doping.[71]
Ice XV 2009[72] 80 K (−193.2 °C)- 108 kelvins (−165 degrees Celsius) (formation from liquid water) 1.1GPa (formation from liquid water) A proton-ordered form of ice VI formed by cooling water to around 80–108 K at 1.1 GPa.
Ice XVI 2014[73] <118 K (−155 °C) (formation from ice III); <140 K (−133 °C) (stability point) 1.2GPa (from ice VII)[70] 0.81 g/cm3)[73] The least dense crystalline form of water, topologically equivalent to the empty structure of sII clathrate hydrates. Transforms into the stacking-faulty ice Ic and further into ordinary ice Ih when above 145–147 K at positive pressures. Theoretical studies predict ice XVI to be thermodynamically stable at negative pressures (that is under tension).[11][74]
Square ice 2014[75] Room temperature (in the presence of graphene) 10GPa [76] Square Formation likely driven by the van der Waals force, which allows water vapor and liquid water to pass through laminated sheets of graphene oxide, unlike smaller molecules such as helium.[76]
Ice XVII 2016 [77] <118 K (−155 °C) (formation from ice III); <140 K (−133 °C) (stability point) 1.2GPa (from ice III) Near that of ice XVI.[77][78] Hexagonal A porous crystalline phase with helical channels, with density Formed by placing hydrogen-filled ice in a vacuum and increasing the temperature until the hydrogen molecules escape.[77]
Ice XVIII 2019 [79] <118 K (−155 °C) (formation from ice III); <140 K (−133 °C) (stability point) 1.2GPa (from ice VII)[70] A form of water also known as superionic water or superionic ice in which oxygen ions develop a crystalline structure while hydrogen ions move freely.
Ice XIX 2018[80] <100 K (−173 °C) (formation from ice VIh); [81] 2GPa (formation from ice VIh)[81] Formation requires HCl doping.[80][81][82]

History of research edit

 
Phase diagram of water, showing the region where ice III is stable.

Ice II edit

The properties of ice II were first described and recorded by Gustav Heinrich Johann Apollon Tammann in 1900 during his experiments with ice under high pressure and low temperatures. Having produced ice III, Tammann then tried condensing the ice at a temperature between −70 and −80 °C (203 and 193 K; −94 and −112 °F) under 200 MPa (2,000 atm) of pressure. Tammann noted that in this state ice II was denser than he had observed ice III to be. He also found that both types of ice can be kept at normal atmospheric pressure in a stable condition so long as the temperature is kept at that of liquid air, which slows the change in conformation back to ice Ih.[45]

In later experiments by Bridgman in 1912, it was shown that the difference in volume between ice II and ice III was in the range of 0.0001 m3/kg (2.8 cu in/lb). This difference hadn't been discovered by Tammann due to the small change and was why he had been unable to determine an equilibrium curve between the two. The curve showed that the structural change from ice III to ice II was more likely to happen if the medium had previously been in the structural conformation of ice II. However, if a sample of ice III that had never been in the ice II state was obtained, it could be supercooled even below −70 °C without it changing into ice II. Conversely, however, any superheating of ice II was not possible in regards to retaining the same form. Bridgman found that the equilibrium curve between ice II and ice IV was much the same as with ice III, having the same stability properties and small volume change. The curve between ice II and ice V was extremely different, however, with the curve's bubble being essentially a straight line and the volume difference being almost always 0.0000545 m3/kg (1.51 cu in/lb).[45]

Search for a hydrogen-disordered counterpart edit

As ice II is completely hydrogen ordered, the presence of its disordered counterpart is a great matter of interest. Shephard et al.[83] investigated the phase boundaries of NH4F-doped ices because NH4F has been reported to be a hydrogen disordering reagent. However, adding 2.5 mol% of NH4F resulted in the disappearance of ice II instead of the formation of a disordered ice II. According to the DFC calculation by Nakamura et al.,[84] the phase boundary between ice II and its disordered counterpart is estimated to be in the stability region of liquid water.

Ice IV edit

1981 research by Engelhardt and Kamb elucidated crystal structure of ice IV through a low-temperature single-crystal X-ray diffraction, describing it as a rhombohedral unit cell with a space group of R-3c.[85] This research mentioned that the structure of ice IV could be derived from the structure of ice Ic by cutting and forming some hydrogen bondings and adding subtle structural distortions. Shephard et al.[86] compressed the ambient phase of NH4F, an isostructural material of ice, to obtain NH4F II, whose hydrogen-bonded network is similar to ice IV. As the compression of ice Ih results in the formation of high-density amorphous ice (HDA), not ice IV, they claimed that the compression-induced conversion of ice I into ice IV is important, naming it "Engelhardt–Kamb collapse" (EKC). They suggested that the reason why we cannot obtain ice IV directly from ice Ih is that ice Ih is hydrogen-disordered; if oxygen atoms are arranged in the ice IV structure, hydrogen bonding may not be formed due to the donor-acceptor mismatch.[87] and Raman [88]

The disordered nature of Ice IV was confirmed by neutron powder diffraction studies by Lobban (1998) [89] and Klotz et al. (2003).[90] In addition, the entropy difference between ice VI (disordered phase) and ice IV is very small, according to Bridgman's measurement.[91]

Several organic nucleating reagents had been proposed to selectively crystallize ice IV from liquid water,[92] but even with such reagents, the crystallization of ice IV from liquid water was very difficult and seemed to be a random event. In 2001, Salzmann and his coworkers reported a whole new method to prepare ice IV reproducibly;[93] when high-density amorphous ice (HDA) is heated at a rate of 0.4 K/min and a pressure of 0.81 GPa, ice IV is crystallized at about 165 K. What governs the crystallization products is the heating rate; fast heating (over 10 K/min) results in the formation of single-phase ice XII.

Search for a hydrogen-ordered counterpart edit

The ordered counterpart of ice IV has never been reported yet. 2011 research by Salzmann's group reported more detailed DSC data where the endothermic feature becomes larger as the sample is quench-recovered at higher pressure. They proposed three scenarios to explain the experimental results: weak hydrogen-ordering, orientational glass transition, and mechanical distortions.[94] reported the DSC thermograms of HCl-doped ice IV finding an endothermic feature at about 120 K. Ten years later, Rosu-Finsen and Salzmann (2021) reported more detailed DSC data where the endothermic feature becomes larger as the sample is quench-recovered at higher pressure. They proposed three scenarios to explain the experimental results: weak hydrogen-ordering, orientational glass transition, and mechanical distortions.[95]

Ice VII edit

Ice VII is the only disordered phase of ice that can be ordered by simple cooling. (While ice Ih theoretically transforms into proton-ordered ice XI on geologic timescales, in practice it is necessary to add small amounts of KOH catalyst.) It forms (ordered) ice VIII below 273 K up to ~8 GPa. Above this pressure, the VII–VIII transition temperature drops rapidly, reaching 0 K at ~60 GPa.[96] Thus, ice VII has the largest stability field of all of the molecular phases of ice. The cubic oxygen sub-lattices that form the backbone of the ice VII structure persist to pressures of at least 128 GPa;[97] this pressure is substantially higher than that at which water loses its molecular character entirely, forming ice X. In high pressure ices, protonic diffusion (movement of protons around the oxygen lattice) dominates molecular diffusion, an effect which has been measured directly.[98]

Ice XI edit

 
Crystal structure of Ice XI viewed along the c-axis
 
Crystal structure of ice XI (c-axis in the vertical direction)

Ice XI is the hydrogen-ordered form of the ordinary form of ice. The total internal energy of ice XI is about one sixth lower than ice Ih, so in principle it should naturally form when ice Ih is cooled to below 72 K. The low temperature required to achieve this transition is correlated with the relatively low energy difference between the two structures.[99] Hints of hydrogen-ordering in ice had been observed as early as 1964, when Dengel et al. attributed a peak in thermo-stimulated depolarization (TSD) current to the existence of a proton-ordered ferroelectric phase.[100] However, they could not conclusively prove that a phase transition had taken place, and Onsager pointed out that the peak could also arise from the movement of defects and lattice imperfections. Onsager suggested that experimentalists look for a dramatic change in heat capacity by performing a careful calorimetric experiment. A phase transition to ice XI was first identified experimentally in 1972 by Shuji Kawada and others.[101][102][103]

Water molecules in ice Ih are surrounded by four semi-randomly directed hydrogen bonds. Such arrangements should change to the more ordered arrangement of hydrogen bonds found in ice XI at low temperatures, so long as localized proton hopping is sufficiently enabled; a process that becomes easier with increasing pressure.[104] Correspondingly, ice XI is believed to have a triple point with hexagonal ice and gaseous water at (~72 K, ~0 Pa). Ice Ih that has been transformed to ice XI and then back to ice Ih, on raising the temperature, retains some hydrogen-ordered domains and more easily transforms back to ice XI again.[105] A neutron powder diffraction study found that small hydrogen-ordered domains can exist up to 111 K.[106]

There are distinct differences in the Raman spectra between ices Ih and XI, with ice XI showing much stronger peaks in the translational (~230 cm−1), librational (~630 cm−1) and in-phase asymmetric stretch (~3200 cm−1) regions.[107][108]

Ice Ic also has a proton-ordered form. The total internal energy of ice XIc was predicted as similar as ice XIh.[109]

Ferroelectric properties edit

Ice XI is ferroelectric, meaning that it has an intrinsic polarization. To qualify as a ferroelectric it must also exhibit polarization switching under an electric field, which has not been conclusively demonstrated but which is implicitly assumed to be possible.[110] Cubic ice also has a ferrolectric phase and in this case the ferroelectric properties of the ice have been experimentally demonstrated on monolayer thin films.[111] In a similar experiment, ferroelectric layers of hexagonal ice were grown on a platinum (111) surface. The material had a polarization that had a decay length of 30 monolayers suggesting that thin layers of ice XI can be grown on substrates at low temperature without the use of dopants.[112] One-dimensional nano-confined ferroelectric ice XI was created in 2010.[113]

Ice XV edit

Although the parent phase ice VI was discovered in 1935, corresponding proton-ordered forms (ice XV) had not been observed until 2009. Theoretically, the proton ordering in ice VI was predicted several times; for example, density functional theory calculations predicted the phase transition temperature is 108 K and the most stable ordered structure is antiferroelectric in the space group Cc, while an antiferroelectric P212121 structure were found 4 K per water molecule higher in energy.[114]

On 14 June 2009, Christoph Salzmann and colleagues at the University of Oxford reported having experimentally reported an ordered phase of ice VI, named ice XV, and say that its properties differ significantly from those predicted. In particular, ice XV is antiferroelectric rather than ferroelectric as had been predicted.[115][116]

In detail, ice XV has a smaller density (larger unit-cell volume) than ice VI. This makes the VI-to-XV disorder-to-order transition much favoured at low pressures. Indeed, differential scanning calorimetry by Shephard and Salzmann revealed that reheating quench-recovered HCl-doped ice XV at ambient pressure even produces exotherms originating from transient ordering, i.e. more ordered ice XV is obtained at ambient pressure. Being consistent with this, the ice VI-XV transition is reversible at ambient pressure.[117] It was also shown that HCl-doping is selectively effective in producing ice XV while other acids and bases (HF, LiOH, HClO4, HBr) do not significantly enhance ice XV formations.[118]

Based on powder neutron diffraction, the crystal structure of ice XV has been investigated in detail. Some researchers suggested that, in combination with density functional theory calculations, none of the possible perfectly ordered orientational configurations are energetically favoured. This implies that there are several energetically close configurations that coexist in ice XV. They proposed 'the orthorhombic Pmmn space group as a plausible space group to describe the time-space averaged structure of ice XV.[119] Other researchers argued that P-1 model is still the best (with the second best candidate of P21), whereas Rietveld refinement using the Pmmn space group only works well for poorly ordered samples. The lattice parameters, in particular b and c, are good indicators of the ice XV formation. Combining density functional theory calculations, they successfully constructed fully ordered model in P-1 and showed that experimental diffraction data should be analysed using space groups that permit full hydrogen order while the Pmmn model only accepts partially ordered structures.[120] -->

Ice XVII edit

 
Crystal structure of ice XVII

In 2016, the discovery of a new form of ice was announced.[77] Characterized as a "porous water ice metastable at atmospheric temperatures", this new form was discovered by taking a filled ice and removing the non-water components, leaving the crystal structure behind, similar to how ice XVI, another porous form of ice, was synthesized from a clathrate hydrate. [121][122]

To create ice XVII, the researchers first produced filled ice in a stable phase named C0 from a mixture of hydrogen (H2) and water (H2O), using temperatures from 100 to 270 K (−173 to −3 °C; −280 to 26 °F) and pressures from 360 to 700 MPa (52,000 to 102,000 psi; 3,600 to 6,900 atm), and C2 are all stable solid phases of a mixture of H2 and H2O molecules, formed at high pressures.[121][78] Although sometimes referred to as clathrate hydrates (or clathrates), they lack the cagelike structure generally found in clathrate hydrates, and are more properly referred to as filled ices.[121] The filled ice is then placed in a vacuum, and the temperature gradually increased until the hydrogen frees itself from the crystal structure.[78] If kept at a temperature range between 110 and 120 K (−163 and −153 °C; −262 and −244 °F), after about two hours, the structure will have emptied itself of any detectable hydrogen molecules.[77] The resulting form is metastable at room pressure while under 120 K (−153 °C; −244 °F), but collapses into ice Ih (ordinary ice) when brought above 130 K (−143 °C; −226 °F).[78] The crystal structure is hexagonal in nature, and the pores are helical channels with a diameter of about 6.10 Å (6.10×10−10 m; 2.40×10−8 in).[77][78]

Cubic ice edit

It was reported in 2020 that cubic ice based on heavy water (D2O) can be formed from ice XVII.[29] This was done by heating specifically prepared D2O ice XVII powder.[29] The result was free of structural deformities compared to standard cubic ice, or ice Isd.[29] This discovery was reported around the same time another research group announced that they were able to obtain pure D2O cubic ice by first synthesizing filled ice in the C2 phase, and then decompressing it.[123]

Ice XVIII (superionic water) edit

 
In the absence of an applied electric field, H+ ions diffuse in the O2− lattice.
 
When an electric field is applied, H+ ions migrate towards the anode.
A remarkable characteristic of superionic ice is its ability to act as a conductor.

In 1988, predictions of the so-called superionic water state were made.[124] In superionic water, water molecules break apart and the oxygen ions crystallize into an evenly spaced lattice while the hydrogen ions float around freely within the oxygen lattice.[125] The freely mobile hydrogen ions make superionic water almost as conductive as typical metals, making it a superionic conductor.[79] The ice appears black in color.[126][127] It is distinct from ionic water, which is a hypothetical liquid state characterized by a disordered soup of hydrogen and oxygen ions.

The initial evidence came from optical measurements of laser-heated water in a diamond anvil cell,[128] and from optical measurements of water shocked by extremely powerful lasers.[126] The first definitive evidence for the crystal structure of the oxygen lattice in superionic water came from x-ray measurements on laser-shocked water which were reported in 2019.[79] In 2005 Laurence Fried led a team at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory to recreate the formative conditions of superionic water. Using a technique involving smashing water molecules between diamonds and super heating it with lasers they observed frequency shifts which indicated that a phase transition had taken place. The team also created computer models which indicated that they had indeed created superionic water.[129] In 2013 Hugh F. Wilson, Michael L. Wong, and Burkhard Militzer at the University of California, Berkeley published a paper predicting the face-centered cubic lattice structure that would emerge at higher pressures.[130] Additional experimental evidence was found by Marius Millot and colleagues in 2018 by inducing high pressure on water between diamonds and then shocking the water using a laser pulse.[126][127]

As of 2013, it is theorized that superionic ice can possess two crystalline structures. At pressures in excess of 50 GPa (7,300,000 psi) it is predicted that superionic ice would take on a body-centered cubic structure. However, at pressures in excess of 100 GPa, and temperatures above 2000 K, it is predicted that the structure would shift to a more stable face-centered cubic lattice.[130]

In 2018, researchers at LLNL squeezed water between two pieces of diamond with a pressure of 2,500 MPa (360,000 psi). The water was squeezed into Ice VII, which is 60 percent denser than normal water.[131] The compressed ice was then transported to the University of Rochester where it was blasted by a pulse of laser light. The reaction created conditions like those inside of ice giants such as Uranus and Neptune by heating up the ice thousands of degrees under a pressure a million times greater than the Earth's atmosphere in only 10 to 20 billionths of a second. The experiment concluded that the current in the conductive water was indeed carried by ions rather than electrons and thus pointed to the water being superionic.[131] More recent experiments from the same Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory team used x-ray crystallography on laser-shocked water droplets to determine that the oxygen ions enter a face-centered-cubic phase, which was dubbed ice XVIII and reported in the journal Nature in May 2019.[79]

Ice XIX edit

The first report regarding ice XIX was published in 2018 by Thomas Loerting's group from Austria.[80] They quenched HCl-doped ice VI to 77 K at different pressures between 1.0 and 1.8 GPa to collect differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) thermograms, dielectric spectrum, Raman spectrum, and X-ray diffraction patterns. In the DSC signals, there was an endothermic feature at about 110 K in addition to the endotherm corresponding to the ice XV-VI transition. Additionally, the Raman spectra, dielectric properties, and the ratio of the lattice parameters differed from those of ice XV. Based on these observations, they proposed the existence of a second hydrogen-ordered phase of ice VI, naming it ice beta-XV.

In 2019, Alexander Rosu-Finsen and Christoph Salzman argued that there was no need to consider this to be a new phase of ice, and proposed a "deep-glassy" state scenario.[132] According to their DSC data, the size of the endothermic feature depends not only on quench-recovery pressure but also on the heating rate and annealing duration at 93 K. They also collected neutron diffraction profiles of quench-recovered deuterium chloride-doped, D2O ice VI/XV prepared at different pressures of 1.0, 1.4 and 1.8 GPa, to show that there were no significant differences among them. They concluded that the low-temperature endotherm originated from kinetic features related to glass transitions of deep glassy states of disordered ice VI.

Distinguishing between the two scenarios (new hydrogen-ordered phase vs. deep-glassy disordered ice VI) became an open question and the debate between the two groups has continued. Thoeny et al. (Loerting's group) [133] collected another series of Raman spectra of ice beta-XV, and reported that (i) ice XV prepared by the protocol reported previously contains both ice XV and ice beta-XV domains; (ii) upon heating, Raman spectra of ice beta-XV showed loss of H-order. In contrast, Salzmann's group again argued for the plausibility of a 'deep-glassy state' scenario based on neutron diffraction and neutron inelastic scattering experiments.[134] Based on their experimental results, ice VI and deep-glassy ice VI share very similar features based on both elastic (diffraction) scattering and inelastic scattering experiments, and are different from the properties of ice XV.

In 2021, further crystallographic evidence for a new phase (ice XIX) was individually reported by three groups: Yamane et al. (Hiroyuki Kagi and Kazuki Komatsu's group from Japan), Gasser et al. (Loerting's group), and Salzmann's group. Yamane et al. [82] collected neutron diffraction profiles in situ (i.e. under high pressure) and found new Bragg features completely different from both ice VI and ice XV. They performed Rietveld refinement of the profiles based on the   supercell of ice XV and proposed some leading candidates for the space group of ice XIX: P-4, Pca21, Pcc2, P21/a, and P21/c. They also measured dielectric spectra in situ and determined phase boundaries of ices VI/XV/XIX. They found that the sign of the slope of the boundary turns negative from positive at 1.6 GPa indicating the existence of two different phases by the Clausius–Clapeyron relation.

Gasser et al. [135] also collected powder neutron diffractograms of quench-recovered ices VI, XV, and XIX and found similar crystallographic features to those reported by Yamane et al., concluding that P-4 and Pcc2 are the plausible space group candidates. Both Yamane et al.'s and Gasser et al.'s results suggested a partially hydrogen-ordered structure. Gasser et al. also found an isotope effect using DSC; the low-temperature endotherm for DCl-doped D2O ice XIX was significantly smaller than that of HCl-doped H2O ice XIX, and that doping of 0.5% of H2O into D2O is sufficient for the ordering transition.

Several months later, Salzmann et al. published a paper based on in-situ powder neutron diffraction experiments of ice XIX.[136] In a change from their previous reports, they accepted the idea of the new phase (ice XIX) as they observed similar features to the previous two reports. However, they refined their diffraction profiles based on a disordered structural model (Pbcn) and argued that new Bragg reflections can be explained by distortions of ice VI, so ice XIX may still be regarded as a deep-glassy state of ice VI. The crystal structure of ice XIX including hydrogen order/disorder is still under debate as of 2022.

Practical implications edit

Earth's natural environment edit

 
Photograph showing details of an ice cube under magnification. Ice Ih is the form of ice commonly seen on Earth.
 
Phase space of ice Ih with respect to other ice phases.

Virtually all ice in the biosphere is ice Ih (pronounced: ice one h, also known as ice-phase-one). Ice Ih exhibits many peculiar properties that are relevant to the existence of life and regulation of global climate. [137] For instance, its density is lower than that of liquid water. This is attributed to the presence of hydrogen bonds which causes atoms to become closer in the liquid phase.[138] Because of this, ice Ih floats on water, which is highly unusual when compared to other materials. The solid phase of materials is usually more closely and neatly packed and has a higher density than the liquid phase. When lakes freeze, they do so only at the surface, while the bottom of the lake remains near 4 °C (277 K; 39 °F) because water is densest at this temperature. This anomalous behavior of water and ice is what allows fish to survive harsh winters. The density of ice Ih increases when cooled, down to about −211 °C (62 K; −348 °F); below that temperature, the ice expands again (negative thermal expansion).[5][6]

Besides ice Ih, a small amount of ice Ic may occasionally present in the upper atmosphere clouds.[139] It is believed to be responsible for the observation of Scheiner's halo, a rare ring that occurs near 28 degrees from the Sun or the Moon.[140] However, many atmospheric samples which were previously described as cubic ice were later shown to be stacking disordered ice with trigonal symmetry,[141][142][143] and it has been dubbed the ″most faceted ice phase in a literal and a more general sense.″[144] The first true samples of cubic ice were only reported in 2020.[30][123]

Low-density ASW (LDA), also known as hyperquenched glassy water, may be responsible for noctilucent clouds on Earth and is usually formed by deposition of water vapor in cold or vacuum conditions. Ice clouds form at and below the Earth's high latitude mesopause (~90 km) where temperatures have been observed to fall as to below 100 K.[145] It has been suggested that homogeneous nucleation of ice particles results in low density amorphous ice.[146] Amorphous ice is likely confined to the coldest parts of the clouds and stacking disordered ice I is thought to dominate elsewhere in these polar mesospheric clouds.[147]

In 2018, ice VII was identified among inclusions found in natural diamonds.[148] Due to this demonstration that ice VII exists in nature, the International Mineralogical Association duly classified ice VII as a distinct mineral.[149] The ice VII was presumably formed when water trapped inside the diamonds retained the high pressure of the deep mantle due to the strength and rigidity of the diamond lattice, but cooled down to surface temperatures, producing the required environment of high pressure without high temperature.[150]

Ice XI is thought to be a more stable conformation than ice Ih, and so it may form on Earth. However, the transformation is very slow. According to one report, in Antarctic conditions it is estimated to take at least 100,000 years to form without the assistance of catalysts.[citation needed] Ice XI was sought and found in Antarctic ice that was about 100 years old in 1998.[151] A further study in 2004 was not able to reproduce this finding, however, after studying Antarctic ice which was around 3000 years old.[152] The 1998 Antarctic study also claimed that the transformation temperature (ice XI => ice Ih) is −36 °C (237 K), which is far higher than the temperature of the expected triple point mentioned above (72 K, ~0 Pa). Ice XI was also found in experiments using pure water at very low temperature (~10 K) and low pressure – conditions thought to be present in the upper atmosphere.[153] Recently, small domains of ice XI were found to form in pure water; its phase transition back to ice Ih occurred at 72 K while under hydrostatic pressure conditions of up to 70 MPa.[154]

Human industry edit

Amorphous ice is used in some scientific experiments, especially in cryo-electron microscopy of biomolecules.[155] The individual molecules can be preserved for imaging in a state close to what they are in liquid water.

Ice XVII can repeatedly adsorb and release hydrogen molecules without degrading its structure.[77] The total amount of hydrogen that ice XVII can adsorb depends on the amount of pressure applied, but hydrogen molecules can be adsorbed by ice XVII even at pressures as low as a few millibars[a] if the temperature is under 40 K (−233.2 °C; −387.7 °F).[77] The adsorbed hydrogen molecules can then be released, or desorbed, through the application of heat.[156] This was an unexpected property of ice XVII, and could allow it to be used for hydrogen storage, an issue often mentioned in environmental technology. [156]

Aside from storing hydrogen via compression or liquification, it can also be stored within a solid substance, either via a reversible chemical process (chemisorption) or by having the hydrogen molecules attach to the substance via the van der Waals force (physisorption). The latter process can occur within ice XVII.[156] In physisorption, there is no chemical reaction, and the chemical bond between the two atoms within a hydrogen molecule remains intact. Because of this, the number of adsorption–desorption cycles ice XVII can withstand is "theoretically infinite".[156]

One significant advantage of using ice XVII as a hydrogen storage medium is the low cost of the only two chemicals involved: hydrogen and water.[156] In addition, ice XVII has shown the ability to store hydrogen at an H2 to H2O molar ratio above 40%, higher than the theoretical maximum ratio for sII clathrate hydrates, another potential storage medium.[77] However, if ice XVII is used as a storage medium, it must be kept under a temperature of 130 K (−143 °C; −226 °F) or risk being destabilized.[156]

Outer space edit

In outer space, hexagonal crystalline ice (the predominant form found on Earth) is extremely rare. Known examples are typically associated with volcanic action.[157] Water in the interstellar medium is instead dominated by amorphous ice, making it likely the most common form of water in the universe.[158][34]

Amorphous ice can be separated from crystalline ice based on its near-infrared and infrared spectrum. At near-IR wavelengths, the characteristics of the 1.65, 3.1, and 4.53 μm water absorption lines are dependent on the ice temperature and crystal order.[159] The peak strength of the 1.65 μm band as well as the structure of the 3.1 μm band are particularly useful in identifying the crystallinity of water ice.[160][161]

At longer IR wavelengths, amorphous and crystalline ice have characteristically different absorption bands at 44 and 62 μm in that the crystalline ice has significant absorption at 62 μm while amorphous ice does not.[162] In addition, these bands can be used as a temperature indicator at very low temperatures where other indicators (such as the 3.1 and 12 μm bands) fail.[163] This is useful studying ice in the interstellar medium and circumstellar disks. However, observing these features is difficult because the atmosphere is opaque at these wavelengths, requiring the use of space-based infrared observatories.

Properties of the amorphous ice in the Solar System edit

In general, amorphous ice can form below ~130 K.[164] At this temperature, water molecules are unable to form the crystalline structure commonly found on Earth. Amorphous ice may also form in the coldest region of the Earth's atmosphere, the summer polar mesosphere, where noctilucent clouds exist.[165] These low temperatures are readily achieved in astrophysical environments such as molecular clouds, circumstellar disks, and the surfaces of objects in the outer Solar System. In the laboratory, amorphous ice transforms into crystalline ice if it is heated above 130 K, although the exact temperature of this conversion is dependent on the environment and ice growth conditions.[166] The reaction is irreversible and exothermic, releasing 1.26–1.6 kJ/mol.[166]

An additional factor in determining the structure of water ice is deposition rate. Even if it is cold enough to form amorphous ice, crystalline ice will form if the flux of water vapor onto the substrate is less than a temperature-dependent critical flux.[167] This effect is important to consider in astrophysical environments where the water flux can be low. Conversely, amorphous ice can be formed at temperatures higher than expected if the water flux is high, such as flash-freezing events associated with cryovolcanism.

At temperatures less than 77 K, irradiation from ultraviolet photons as well as high-energy electrons and ions can damage the structure of crystalline ice, transforming it into amorphous ice.[168][162] Amorphous ice does not appear to be significantly affected by radiation at temperatures less than 110 K, though some experiments suggest that radiation might lower the temperature at which amorphous ice begins to crystallize.[162]

Peter Jenniskens and David F. Blake demonstrated in 1994 that a form of high-density amorphous ice is also created during vapor deposition of water on low-temperature (< 30 K) surfaces such as interstellar grains. The water molecules do not fully align to create the open cage structure of low-density amorphous ice. Many water molecules end up at interstitial positions. When warmed above 30 K, the structure re-aligns and transforms into the low-density form.[35][41]

Molecular clouds, circumstellar disks, and the primordial solar nebula edit

Molecular clouds have extremely low temperatures (~10 K), falling well within the amorphous ice regime. The presence of amorphous ice in molecular clouds has been observationally confirmed.[169] When molecular clouds collapse to form stars, the temperature of the resulting circumstellar disk isn't expected to rise above 120 K, indicating that the majority of the ice should remain in an amorphous state.[167] However, if the temperature rises high enough to sublimate the ice, then it can re-condense into a crystalline form since the water flux rate is so low. This is expected to be the case in the circumstellar disk of IRAS 09371+1212, where signatures of crystallized ice were observed despite a low temperature of 30–70 K.[170]

For the primordial solar nebula, there is much uncertainty as to the crystallinity of water ice during the circumstellar disk and planet formation phases. If the original amorphous ice survived the molecular cloud collapse, then it should have been preserved at heliocentric distances beyond Saturn's orbit (~12 AU).[167]

Comets edit

The possibility of the presence of amorphous water ice in comets and the release of energy during the phase transition to a crystalline state was first proposed as a mechanism for comet outbursts.[171] Evidence of amorphous ice in comets is found in the high levels of activity observed in long-period, Centaur, and Jupiter Family comets at heliocentric distances beyond ~6 AU.[172] These objects are too cold for the sublimation of water ice, which drives comet activity closer to the Sun, to have much of an effect. Thermodynamic models show that the surface temperatures of those comets are near the amorphous/crystalline ice transition temperature of ~130 K, supporting this as a likely source of the activity.[173] The runaway crystallization of amorphous ice can produce the energy needed to power outbursts such as those observed for Centaur Comet 29P/Schwassmann–Wachmann 1.[174][175]

Kuiper Belt objects edit

With radiation equilibrium temperatures of 40–50 K,[176] the objects in the Kuiper Belt are expected to have amorphous water ice. While water ice has been observed on several objects,[177][178] the extreme faintness of these objects makes it difficult to determine the structure of the ices. The signatures of crystalline water ice was observed on 50000 Quaoar, perhaps due to resurfacing events such as impacts or cryovolcanism.[179]

Icy moons edit

The Near-Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (NIMS) on NASA's Galileo spacecraft spectroscopically mapped the surface ice of the Jovian satellites Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto. The temperatures of these moons range from 90 to 160 K,[180] warm enough that amorphous ice is expected to crystallize on relatively short timescales. However, it was found that Europa has primarily amorphous ice, Ganymede has both amorphous and crystalline ice, and Callisto is primarily crystalline.[181] This is thought to be the result of competing forces: the thermal crystallization of amorphous ice versus the conversion of crystalline to amorphous ice by the flux of charged particles from Jupiter. Closer to Jupiter than the other three moons, Europa receives the highest level of radiation and thus through irradiation has the most amorphous ice. Callisto is the farthest from Jupiter, receiving the lowest radiation flux and therefore maintaining its crystalline ice. Ganymede, which lies between the two, exhibits amorphous ice at high latitudes and crystalline ice at the lower latitudes. This is thought to be the result of the moon's intrinsic magnetic field, which would funnel the charged particles to higher latitudes and protect the lower latitudes from irradiation.[181] Ganymede's interior probably includes a liquid water ocean with tens to hundreds of kilometers of ice V at its base.[182]

The surface ice of Saturn's moon Enceladus was mapped by the Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) on the NASA/ESA/ASI Cassini space probe. The probe found both crystalline and amorphous ice, with a higher degree of crystallinity at the "tiger stripe" cracks on the surface and more amorphous ice between these regions.[159] The crystalline ice near the tiger stripes could be explained by higher temperatures caused by geological activity that is the suspected cause of the cracks. The amorphous ice might be explained by flash freezing from cryovolcanism, rapid condensation of molecules from water geysers, or irradiation of high-energy particles from Saturn.[159] Similarly, one of one of the inner layers of Titan is believed to contain ice VI.[183]

Medium-density amorphous ice may be present on Europa, as the experimental conditions of its formation are expected to occur there as well. It is possible that the MDA ice's unique property of releasing a large amount of heat energy after being released from compression could be responsible for 'ice quakes' within the thick ice layers.[21]

Planets edit

Because ice XI can theoretically form at low pressures at temperatures between 50–70 K – temperatures present in astrophysical environments of the outer solar system and within permanently shaded polar craters on the Moon and Mercury. Ice XI forms most easily around 70 K – paradoxically, it takes longer to form at lower temperatures. Extrapolating from experimental measurements, it is estimated to take ~50 years to form at 70 K and ~300 million years at 50 K.[184] It is theorized to be present in places like the upper atmospheres of Uranus and Neptune[106] and on Pluto and Charon.[184]

Ice VII may comprise the ocean floor of Europa as well as extrasolar planets (such as Awohali, and Enaiposha) that are largely made of water.[185][186]

Small domains of ice XI could exist in the atmospheres of Jupiter and Saturn as well.[106] The fact that small domains of ice XI can exist at temperatures up to 111 K has some scientists speculating that it may be fairly common in interstellar space, with small 'nucleation seeds' spreading through space and converting regular ice, much like the fabled ice-nine mentioned in Vonnegut's Cat's Cradle.[106][187] The possible roles of ice XI in interstellar space[184][188] and planet formation[189] have been the subject of several research papers. Until observational confirmation of ice XI in outer space is made, the presence of ice XI in space remains controversial owing to the aforementioned criticism raised by Iitaka.[190] The infrared absorption spectra of ice XI was studied in 2009 in preparation for searches for ice XI in space.[191]

It is theorized that the ice giant planets Uranus and Neptune hold a layer of superionic water.[192][129] [193][130] Machine learning and free-energy methods predict close-packed superionic phases to be stable over a wide temperature and pressure range, and a body-centred cubic superionic phase to be kinetically favoured, but stable over a small window of parameters.[194] On the other hand, there are also studies that suggest that other elements present inside the interiors of these planets, particularly carbon, may prevent the formation of superionic water.[195][196]

Notes edit

  1. ^ One millibar is equivalent to 100 Pa (0.015 psi; 0.00099 atm).

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Further reading edit

  • Ice phases (www.idc-online.com)
  • Fletcher, N. H. (2009-06-04). The Chemical Physics of Ice. ISBN 9780521112307.
  • Petrenko, Victor F.; Whitworth, Robert W. (1999-08-19). Physics of Ice. ISBN 9780191581342.
  • Chaplin, Martin (2007-11-11). "Hexagonal ice structure". Water Structure and Science. Retrieved 2008-01-02.
  • London South Bank University Report
  • Physik des Eises (PDF in German, iktp.tu-dresden.de)


External links edit

  • Hunsberger, Maren (September 21, 2018). "A New State of Water Reveals a Hidden Ocean in Earth's Mantle". Seeker. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21 – via YouTube.
  • Woo, Marcus (July 11, 2018). "The Hunt for Earth's Deep Hidden Oceans". Quanta Magazine.
  • Discussion of amorphous ice at LSBU's website.
  • Glass transition in hyperquenched water from Nature (requires registration)
  • Glassy Water from Science, on phase diagrams of water (requires registration)
  • HDA in space


phases, phases, possible, states, matter, water, solid, currently, phases, including, both, crystalline, amorphous, have, been, observed, various, densities, pressure, temperature, phase, diagram, water, roman, numerals, correspond, some, phases, listed, below. The phases of ice are all possible states of matter for water as a solid Currently 19 phases including both crystalline and amorphous ice have been observed at various densities Log lin pressure temperature phase diagram of water The Roman numerals correspond to some ice phases listed below Contents 1 Theory 2 Crystal structure 2 1 Amorphous ice 3 Pressure dependent states 4 Heat and entropy 4 1 Hydrogen disorder 4 2 Calculations 4 3 Refinements 5 Known phases 6 History of research 6 1 Ice II 6 1 1 Search for a hydrogen disordered counterpart 6 2 Ice IV 6 2 1 Search for a hydrogen ordered counterpart 6 3 Ice VII 6 4 Ice XI 6 4 1 Ferroelectric properties 6 5 Ice XV 6 6 Ice XVII 6 7 Cubic ice 6 8 Ice XVIII superionic water 6 9 Ice XIX 7 Practical implications 7 1 Earth s natural environment 7 2 Human industry 7 3 Outer space 7 3 1 Properties of the amorphous ice in the Solar System 7 3 2 Molecular clouds circumstellar disks and the primordial solar nebula 7 3 3 Comets 7 3 4 Kuiper Belt objects 7 3 5 Icy moons 7 3 6 Planets 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksTheory editMost liquids under increased pressure freeze at higher temperatures because the pressure helps to hold the molecules together However the strong hydrogen bonds in water make it different for some pressures higher than 1 atm 0 10 MPa water freezes at a temperature below 0 C Subjected to higher pressures and varying temperatures ice can form in nineteen separate known crystalline phases With care at least fifteen of these phases one of the known exceptions being ice X can be recovered at ambient pressure and low temperature in metastable form 1 2 The types are differentiated by their crystalline structure proton ordering 3 and density There are also two metastable phases of ice under pressure both fully hydrogen disordered these are Ice IV and Ice XII Crystal structure edit nbsp Crystal structure of ice Ih Dashed lines represent hydrogen bonds nbsp The crystal structure of ice XII The accepted crystal structure of ordinary ice was first proposed by Linus Pauling in 1935 The structure of ice Ih is the wurtzite lattice roughly one of crinkled planes composed of tessellating hexagonal rings with an oxygen atom on each vertex and the edges of the rings formed by hydrogen bonds The planes alternate in an ABAB pattern with B planes being reflections of the A planes along the same axes as the planes themselves 4 The distance between oxygen atoms along each bond is about 275 pm and is the same between any two bonded oxygen atoms in the lattice The angle between bonds in the crystal lattice is very close to the tetrahedral angle of 109 5 which is also quite close to the angle between hydrogen atoms in the water molecule in the gas phase which is 105 This tetrahedral bonding angle of the water molecule essentially accounts for the unusually low density of the crystal lattice it is beneficial for the lattice to be arranged with tetrahedral angles even though there is an energy penalty in the increased volume of the crystal lattice As a result the large hexagonal rings leave almost enough room for another water molecule to exist inside This gives naturally occurring ice its rare property of being less dense than its liquid form The tetrahedral angled hydrogen bonded hexagonal rings are also the mechanism that causes liquid water to be densest at 4 C Close to 0 C tiny hexagonal ice Ih like lattices form in liquid water with greater frequency closer to 0 C This effect decreases the density of the water causing it to be densest at 4 C when the structures form infrequently In the best known form of ice ice Ih the crystal structure is characterized by the oxygen atoms forming hexagonal symmetry with near tetrahedral bonding angles This structure is stable down to 268 C 5 K 450 F as evidenced by x ray diffraction 5 and extremely high resolution thermal expansion measurements 6 Ice Ih is also stable under applied pressures of up to about 210 megapascals 2 100 atm where it transitions into ice III or ice II 7 Amorphous ice edit While most forms of ice are crystalline several amorphous or vitreous forms of ice also exist Such ice is an amorphous solid form of water which lacks long range order in its molecular arrangement Amorphous ice is produced either by rapid cooling of liquid water to its glass transition temperature about 136 K or 137 C in milliseconds so the molecules do not have enough time to form a crystal lattice or by compressing ordinary ice at low temperatures The most common form on Earth low density ice is usually formed in the laboratory by a slow accumulation of water vapor molecules physical vapor deposition onto a very smooth metal crystal surface under 120 K In outer space it is expected to be formed in a similar manner on a variety of cold substrates such as dust particles 8 By contrast hyperquenched glassy water HGW is formed by spraying a fine mist of water droplets into a liquid such as propane around 80 K or by hyperquenching fine micrometer sized droplets on a sample holder kept at liquid nitrogen temperature 77 K in a vacuum Cooling rates above 104 K s are required to prevent crystallization of the droplets At liquid nitrogen temperature 77 K HGW is kinetically stable and can be stored for many years Amorphous ices have the property of suppressing long range density fluctuations and are therefore nearly hyperuniform 9 Despite the epithet ice classification analysis utilizing neural networks has shown that amorphous ices are glasses 10 Pressure dependent states edit nbsp Water phase diagram extended to negative pressures calculated with TIP4P 2005 model 11 Ice from a theorized superionic water may possess two crystalline structures At pressures in excess of 50 GPa 7 300 000 psi such superionic ice would take on a body centered cubic structure However at pressures in excess of 100 GPa 15 000 000 psi the structure may shift to a more stable face centered cubic lattice Some estimates suggest that at an extremely high pressure of around 1 55 TPa 225 000 000 psi ice would develop metalic properties 12 Heat and entropy edit nbsp An alternative formulation of the phase diagram for certain ices and other phases of water 13 Ice water and water vapour can coexist at the triple point which is exactly 273 16 K 0 01 C at a pressure of 611 657 Pa 14 15 The kelvin was defined as 1 273 16 of the difference between this triple point and absolute zero 16 though this definition changed in May 2019 17 Unlike most other solids ice is difficult to superheat In an experiment ice at 3 C was superheated to about 17 C for about 250 picoseconds 18 nbsp Pressure dependence of ice melting The latent heat of melting is 5987 J mol and its latent heat of sublimation is 50911 J mol The high latent heat of sublimation is principally indicative of the strength of the hydrogen bonds in the crystal lattice The latent heat of melting is much smaller partly because liquid water near 0 C also contains a significant number of hydrogen bonds By contrast the structure of ice II is hydrogen ordered which helps to explain the entropy change of 3 22 J mol when the crystal structure changes to that of ice I Also ice XI an orthorhombic hydrogen ordered form of ice Ih is considered the most stable form at low temperatures The transition entropy from ice XIV to ice XII is estimated to be 60 of Pauling entropy based on DSC measurements 19 The formation of ice XIV from ice XII is more favoured at high pressure 20 When medium density amorphous ice is compressed released and then heated it releases a large amount of heat energy unlike other water ices which return to their normal form after getting similar treatment 21 Hydrogen disorder edit See also Ice rules and Geometrical frustration Water ice nbsp The Wurtzite structure In Ice Ih the oxygen atoms are arranged on the lattice points and the hydrogen atoms are on the bonds between lattice points Each oxygen atom has 4 neighboring ones Note that the lattice bipartites into two subsets here colored black and white The hydrogen atoms in the crystal lattice lie very nearly along the hydrogen bonds and in such a way that each water molecule is preserved This means that each oxygen atom in the lattice has two hydrogens adjacent to it at about 101 pm along the 275 pm length of the bond for ice Ih The crystal lattice allows a substantial amount of disorder in the positions of the hydrogen atoms frozen into the structure as it cools to absolute zero As a result the crystal structure contains some residual entropy inherent to the lattice and determined by the number of possible configurations of hydrogen positions that can be formed while still maintaining the requirement for each oxygen atom to have only two hydrogens in closest proximity and each H bond joining two oxygen atoms having only one hydrogen atom 22 This residual entropy S0 is equal to 3 4 0 1 J mol 1 K 1 R ln 1 50 0 02 displaystyle R ln 1 50 pm 0 02 nbsp 23 Calculations edit There are various ways of approximating this number from first principles The following is the one used by Linus Pauling 24 25 Suppose there are a given number N of water molecules in an ice lattice To compute its residual entropy we need to count the number of configurations that the lattice can assume The oxygen atoms are fixed at the lattice points but the hydrogen atoms are located on the lattice edges The problem is to pick one end of each lattice edge for the hydrogen to bond to in a way that still makes sure each oxygen atom is bond to two hydrogen atoms The oxygen atoms can be divided into two sets in a checkerboard pattern shown in the picture as black and white balls Focus attention on the oxygen atoms in one set there are N 2 of them Each has four hydrogen bonds with two hydrogens close to it and two far away This means there are 4 2 6 textstyle tbinom 4 2 6 nbsp allowed configurations of hydrogens for this oxygen atom see Binomial coefficient Thus there are 6N 2 configurations that satisfy these N 2 atoms But now consider the remaining N 2 oxygen atoms in general they won t be satisfied i e they will not have precisely two hydrogen atoms near them For each of those there are 24 16 possible placements of the hydrogen atoms along their hydrogen bonds of which 6 are allowed So naively we would expect the total number of configurations to be6 N 2 6 16 N 2 3 2 N displaystyle 6 N 2 6 16 N 2 3 2 N nbsp Using Boltzmann s entropy formula we conclude thatS 0 k ln 3 2 N n R ln 3 2 displaystyle S 0 k ln 3 2 N nR ln 3 2 nbsp where k is the Boltzmann constant and R is the molar gas constant So the molar residual entropy is R ln 3 2 3 37 J m o l 1 K 1 displaystyle R ln 3 2 3 37 mathrm J cdot mathrm mol 1 mathrm K 1 nbsp The same answer can be found in another way First orient each water molecule randomly in each of the 6 possible configurations then check that each lattice edge contains exactly one hydrogen atom Assuming that the lattice edges are independent then the probability that a single edge contains exactly one hydrogen atom is 1 2 and since there are 2N edges in total we obtain a total configuration count 6 N 1 2 2 N 3 2 N displaystyle 6 N times 1 2 2N 3 2 N nbsp as before Refinements edit nbsp The crystal structure of ice VIII This estimate is naive as it assumes the six out of 16 hydrogen configurations for oxygen atoms in the second set can be independently chosen which is false More complex methods can be employed to better approximate the exact number of possible configurations and achieve results closer to measured values Nagle 1966 used a series summation to obtain R ln 1 50685 0 00015 displaystyle R ln 1 50685 pm 0 00015 nbsp 26 As an illustrative example of refinement consider the following way to refine the second estimation method given above According to it six water molecules in a hexagonal ring would allow 6 6 1 2 6 729 displaystyle 6 6 times 1 2 6 729 nbsp configurations However by explicit enumeration there are actually 730 configurations Now in the lattice each oxygen atom participates in 12 hexagonal rings so there are 2N rings in total for N oxygen atoms or 2 rings for each oxygen atom giving a refined result of R ln 1 5 730 729 2 R ln 1 504 displaystyle R ln 1 5 times 730 729 2 R ln 1 504 nbsp 27 Known phases editThese phases are named according to the Bridgman nomenclature The majority have only been created in the laboratory at different temperatures and pressures 28 Phase Year of discovery Temperature thresholds Pressure thresholds Density Crystal form Other characteristics Ice Ih NA always known 0 C 32 F freezing NA atmospheric 0 917 g cm3 Hexagonal Virtually all ice in the biosphere is ice Ih with the exception only of a small amount of ice Ic Has a refractive index of 1 31 Ice Ic 1943 2020 29 30 130 and 220 K 143 and 53 C formation 240 K 33 C conversion to Ice Ih 31 32 NA atmospheric Similar to Ice Ih Diamond 33 A metastable cubic crystalline variant of ice Low density amorphous ice LDA 1930s 34 NA atmospheric or lower 0 94 g cm3 35 NA amorphous Likely the most common phase in the universe 34 More viscous than normal water 35 36 37 Medium density amorphous ice MDA 2023 21 38 200 C 328 0 F freezing NA requires shear force 1 06 0 06 g cm3 39 NA amorphous Experimental procedure generates shear force by crushing ice into powder with centimeter wide stainless steel balls added to its container High density amorphous ice HDA 1984 40 lt 140 K 133 C normal formation lt 30 K 243 2 C vapor deposition 35 41 77 K 196 2 C stability point 40 At 77 K 196 2 C 1 6 GPa formation from Ih 40 0 5nbsp GPa formation from LDA 42 1 17 g cm3 ambient pressure 40 NA amorphous Very high density amorphous ice VHDA 1996 43 160 K 113 C formation from HDA 77 K 196 2 C stability point 1 and 2 GPa formation at 160 K 113 C ambient at 77 K 196 2 C 1 26 g cm3 77 K 196 2 C ambient pressure 44 NA amorphous Ice II 1900 45 190 K 83 C 210 K 63 C formation from ice Ih 77 K 196 2 C stability point 45 300 MPa 46 Rhombohedral Ice III 1900 45 250 K 23 C formation from liquid water 77 K 196 2 C stability point 45 300 MPa formation from liquid water 46 1160 kg m3 at 350 MPa 47 Tetragonal Very high relative permittivity at 117 A specific gravity of 1 16 with respect to water Ice IV 1900 45 190 K 83 C 210 K 63 C formation from HDA 77 K 196 2 C stability point 810 MPa formation from HDA Rhombohedral Typically requires a nucleating agent to form 48 Ice V 1900s 49 253 K 20 C formation from liquid water 500 MPa formation from liquid water 50 1 24 g cm3 at 350 MPa 51 Monoclinic Most complicated structure of all the phases Includes 4 membered 5 membered 6 membered and 8 membered rings and a total of 28 molecules in the unit cell 52 53 Ice VI 1912 54 270 K 3 C formation from liquid water 130 K 143 C 355 K 82 C stability range 1 1 GPa formation from liquid water 50 1 31 g cm3 55 Tetragonal Exhibits Debye relaxation 56 Ice VII 1937 57 58 270 K 3 C formation from ice Ih 1 1 GPa formation from ice Ih 5 GPa formation of tetragonal structure 59 Cubic tetragonal The hydrogen atoms positions are disordered Exhibits Debye relaxation The hydrogen bonds form two interpenetrating lattices Tetragonal form known as Ice VIIt Ice VIII 1966 60 lt 5 C 278 K formation from ice VII 2 1 GPa formation from ice VII Cubic Hydrogen atoms assume fixed positions 61 Ice IX 1968 62 165 K 108 C formation from ice III lt 140 K 133 C stability point 200 MPa 400 MPa stability range 1 16 g cm3 Tetragonal Proton ordered equivalent to Ice III 63 Antiferroelectric 62 Ice X 2022 contested 64 165 K 108 C formation from ice III lt 140 K 133 C stability point 30 70 GPa from ice VII 65 59 Cubic Has symmetrized hydrogen bonds a hydrogen atom is found at the center of two oxygen atoms Ice XI 1972 66 72 K 201 2 C formation from ice Ic Orthorhombic Ferroelectric The most stable configuration of ice Ih 67 Ice XII 1996 68 260 K 13 C 8 F formation from liquid water 77 K 196 2 C 321 1 F formation from ice Ih 183 K 90 C formation from HDA ice 0 55 gigapascals 5 400 atm formation from liquid water 0 81 1 00 GPa min from ice Ih 810 MPa formation from HDA ice 1 3 g cm 3 at 127 K 146 C Tetragonal Metastable Observed in the phase space of ice V and ice VI A topological mix of seven and eight membered rings a 4 connected net 4 coordinate sphere packing the densest possible arrangement without hydrogen bond interpenetration Ice XIII 2006 69 130 K 143 C formation from liquid water 70 500 MPa formation from liquid water 70 Monoclinic The proton ordered form of ice V 70 Ice XIV 2006 69 lt 118 K 155 C formation from ice XII lt 140 K 133 C stability point 1 2GPa formation from ice XII 70 Orthorhombic The proton ordered form of ice XII 70 Formation requires HCl doping 71 Ice XV 2009 72 80 K 193 2 C 108 kelvins 165 degrees Celsius formation from liquid water 1 1GPa formation from liquid water A proton ordered form of ice VI formed by cooling water to around 80 108 K at 1 1 GPa Ice XVI 2014 73 lt 118 K 155 C formation from ice III lt 140 K 133 C stability point 1 2GPa from ice VII 70 0 81 g cm3 73 The least dense crystalline form of water topologically equivalent to the empty structure of sII clathrate hydrates Transforms into the stacking faulty ice Ic and further into ordinary ice Ih when above 145 147 K at positive pressures Theoretical studies predict ice XVI to be thermodynamically stable at negative pressures that is under tension 11 74 Square ice 2014 75 Room temperature in the presence of graphene 10GPa 76 Square Formation likely driven by the van der Waals force which allows water vapor and liquid water to pass through laminated sheets of graphene oxide unlike smaller molecules such as helium 76 Ice XVII 2016 77 lt 118 K 155 C formation from ice III lt 140 K 133 C stability point 1 2GPa from ice III Near that of ice XVI 77 78 Hexagonal A porous crystalline phase with helical channels with density Formed by placing hydrogen filled ice in a vacuum and increasing the temperature until the hydrogen molecules escape 77 Ice XVIII 2019 79 lt 118 K 155 C formation from ice III lt 140 K 133 C stability point 1 2GPa from ice VII 70 A form of water also known as superionic water or superionic ice in which oxygen ions develop a crystalline structure while hydrogen ions move freely Ice XIX 2018 80 lt 100 K 173 C formation from ice VIh 81 2GPa formation from ice VIh 81 Formation requires HCl doping 80 81 82 History of research edit nbsp Phase diagram of water showing the region where ice III is stable Ice II edit The properties of ice II were first described and recorded by Gustav Heinrich Johann Apollon Tammann in 1900 during his experiments with ice under high pressure and low temperatures Having produced ice III Tammann then tried condensing the ice at a temperature between 70 and 80 C 203 and 193 K 94 and 112 F under 200 MPa 2 000 atm of pressure Tammann noted that in this state ice II was denser than he had observed ice III to be He also found that both types of ice can be kept at normal atmospheric pressure in a stable condition so long as the temperature is kept at that of liquid air which slows the change in conformation back to ice Ih 45 In later experiments by Bridgman in 1912 it was shown that the difference in volume between ice II and ice III was in the range of 0 0001 m3 kg 2 8 cu in lb This difference hadn t been discovered by Tammann due to the small change and was why he had been unable to determine an equilibrium curve between the two The curve showed that the structural change from ice III to ice II was more likely to happen if the medium had previously been in the structural conformation of ice II However if a sample of ice III that had never been in the ice II state was obtained it could be supercooled even below 70 C without it changing into ice II Conversely however any superheating of ice II was not possible in regards to retaining the same form Bridgman found that the equilibrium curve between ice II and ice IV was much the same as with ice III having the same stability properties and small volume change The curve between ice II and ice V was extremely different however with the curve s bubble being essentially a straight line and the volume difference being almost always 0 0000545 m3 kg 1 51 cu in lb 45 Search for a hydrogen disordered counterpart edit As ice II is completely hydrogen ordered the presence of its disordered counterpart is a great matter of interest Shephard et al 83 investigated the phase boundaries of NH4F doped ices because NH4F has been reported to be a hydrogen disordering reagent However adding 2 5 mol of NH4F resulted in the disappearance of ice II instead of the formation of a disordered ice II According to the DFC calculation by Nakamura et al 84 the phase boundary between ice II and its disordered counterpart is estimated to be in the stability region of liquid water Ice IV edit 1981 research by Engelhardt and Kamb elucidated crystal structure of ice IV through a low temperature single crystal X ray diffraction describing it as a rhombohedral unit cell with a space group of R 3c 85 This research mentioned that the structure of ice IV could be derived from the structure of ice Ic by cutting and forming some hydrogen bondings and adding subtle structural distortions Shephard et al 86 compressed the ambient phase of NH4F an isostructural material of ice to obtain NH4F II whose hydrogen bonded network is similar to ice IV As the compression of ice Ih results in the formation of high density amorphous ice HDA not ice IV they claimed that the compression induced conversion of ice I into ice IV is important naming it Engelhardt Kamb collapse EKC They suggested that the reason why we cannot obtain ice IV directly from ice Ih is that ice Ih is hydrogen disordered if oxygen atoms are arranged in the ice IV structure hydrogen bonding may not be formed due to the donor acceptor mismatch 87 and Raman 88 The disordered nature of Ice IV was confirmed by neutron powder diffraction studies by Lobban 1998 89 and Klotz et al 2003 90 In addition the entropy difference between ice VI disordered phase and ice IV is very small according to Bridgman s measurement 91 Several organic nucleating reagents had been proposed to selectively crystallize ice IV from liquid water 92 but even with such reagents the crystallization of ice IV from liquid water was very difficult and seemed to be a random event In 2001 Salzmann and his coworkers reported a whole new method to prepare ice IV reproducibly 93 when high density amorphous ice HDA is heated at a rate of 0 4 K min and a pressure of 0 81 GPa ice IV is crystallized at about 165 K What governs the crystallization products is the heating rate fast heating over 10 K min results in the formation of single phase ice XII Search for a hydrogen ordered counterpart edit The ordered counterpart of ice IV has never been reported yet 2011 research by Salzmann s group reported more detailed DSC data where the endothermic feature becomes larger as the sample is quench recovered at higher pressure They proposed three scenarios to explain the experimental results weak hydrogen ordering orientational glass transition and mechanical distortions 94 reported the DSC thermograms of HCl doped ice IV finding an endothermic feature at about 120 K Ten years later Rosu Finsen and Salzmann 2021 reported more detailed DSC data where the endothermic feature becomes larger as the sample is quench recovered at higher pressure They proposed three scenarios to explain the experimental results weak hydrogen ordering orientational glass transition and mechanical distortions 95 Ice VII edit Ice VII is the only disordered phase of ice that can be ordered by simple cooling While ice Ih theoretically transforms into proton ordered ice XI on geologic timescales in practice it is necessary to add small amounts of KOH catalyst It forms ordered ice VIII below 273 K up to 8 GPa Above this pressure the VII VIII transition temperature drops rapidly reaching 0 K at 60 GPa 96 Thus ice VII has the largest stability field of all of the molecular phases of ice The cubic oxygen sub lattices that form the backbone of the ice VII structure persist to pressures of at least 128 GPa 97 this pressure is substantially higher than that at which water loses its molecular character entirely forming ice X In high pressure ices protonic diffusion movement of protons around the oxygen lattice dominates molecular diffusion an effect which has been measured directly 98 Ice XI edit nbsp Crystal structure of Ice XI viewed along the c axis nbsp Crystal structure of ice XI c axis in the vertical direction Ice XI is the hydrogen ordered form of the ordinary form of ice The total internal energy of ice XI is about one sixth lower than ice Ih so in principle it should naturally form when ice Ih is cooled to below 72 K The low temperature required to achieve this transition is correlated with the relatively low energy difference between the two structures 99 Hints of hydrogen ordering in ice had been observed as early as 1964 when Dengel et al attributed a peak in thermo stimulated depolarization TSD current to the existence of a proton ordered ferroelectric phase 100 However they could not conclusively prove that a phase transition had taken place and Onsager pointed out that the peak could also arise from the movement of defects and lattice imperfections Onsager suggested that experimentalists look for a dramatic change in heat capacity by performing a careful calorimetric experiment A phase transition to ice XI was first identified experimentally in 1972 by Shuji Kawada and others 101 102 103 Water molecules in ice Ih are surrounded by four semi randomly directed hydrogen bonds Such arrangements should change to the more ordered arrangement of hydrogen bonds found in ice XI at low temperatures so long as localized proton hopping is sufficiently enabled a process that becomes easier with increasing pressure 104 Correspondingly ice XI is believed to have a triple point with hexagonal ice and gaseous water at 72 K 0 Pa Ice Ih that has been transformed to ice XI and then back to ice Ih on raising the temperature retains some hydrogen ordered domains and more easily transforms back to ice XI again 105 A neutron powder diffraction study found that small hydrogen ordered domains can exist up to 111 K 106 There are distinct differences in the Raman spectra between ices Ih and XI with ice XI showing much stronger peaks in the translational 230 cm 1 librational 630 cm 1 and in phase asymmetric stretch 3200 cm 1 regions 107 108 Ice Ic also has a proton ordered form The total internal energy of ice XIc was predicted as similar as ice XIh 109 Ferroelectric properties edit Ice XI is ferroelectric meaning that it has an intrinsic polarization To qualify as a ferroelectric it must also exhibit polarization switching under an electric field which has not been conclusively demonstrated but which is implicitly assumed to be possible 110 Cubic ice also has a ferrolectric phase and in this case the ferroelectric properties of the ice have been experimentally demonstrated on monolayer thin films 111 In a similar experiment ferroelectric layers of hexagonal ice were grown on a platinum 111 surface The material had a polarization that had a decay length of 30 monolayers suggesting that thin layers of ice XI can be grown on substrates at low temperature without the use of dopants 112 One dimensional nano confined ferroelectric ice XI was created in 2010 113 Ice XV edit Although the parent phase ice VI was discovered in 1935 corresponding proton ordered forms ice XV had not been observed until 2009 Theoretically the proton ordering in ice VI was predicted several times for example density functional theory calculations predicted the phase transition temperature is 108 K and the most stable ordered structure is antiferroelectric in the space group Cc while an antiferroelectric P212121 structure were found 4 K per water molecule higher in energy 114 On 14 June 2009 Christoph Salzmann and colleagues at the University of Oxford reported having experimentally reported an ordered phase of ice VI named ice XV and say that its properties differ significantly from those predicted In particular ice XV is antiferroelectric rather than ferroelectric as had been predicted 115 116 In detail ice XV has a smaller density larger unit cell volume than ice VI This makes the VI to XV disorder to order transition much favoured at low pressures Indeed differential scanning calorimetry by Shephard and Salzmann revealed that reheating quench recovered HCl doped ice XV at ambient pressure even produces exotherms originating from transient ordering i e more ordered ice XV is obtained at ambient pressure Being consistent with this the ice VI XV transition is reversible at ambient pressure 117 It was also shown that HCl doping is selectively effective in producing ice XV while other acids and bases HF LiOH HClO4 HBr do not significantly enhance ice XV formations 118 Based on powder neutron diffraction the crystal structure of ice XV has been investigated in detail Some researchers suggested that in combination with density functional theory calculations none of the possible perfectly ordered orientational configurations are energetically favoured This implies that there are several energetically close configurations that coexist in ice XV They proposed the orthorhombic Pmmn space group as a plausible space group to describe the time space averaged structure of ice XV 119 Other researchers argued that P 1 model is still the best with the second best candidate of P21 whereas Rietveld refinement using the Pmmn space group only works well for poorly ordered samples The lattice parameters in particular b and c are good indicators of the ice XV formation Combining density functional theory calculations they successfully constructed fully ordered model in P 1 and showed that experimental diffraction data should be analysed using space groups that permit full hydrogen order while the Pmmn model only accepts partially ordered structures 120 gt Ice XVII edit nbsp Crystal structure of ice XVII In 2016 the discovery of a new form of ice was announced 77 Characterized as a porous water ice metastable at atmospheric temperatures this new form was discovered by taking a filled ice and removing the non water components leaving the crystal structure behind similar to how ice XVI another porous form of ice was synthesized from a clathrate hydrate 121 122 To create ice XVII the researchers first produced filled ice in a stable phase named C0 from a mixture of hydrogen H2 and water H2O using temperatures from 100 to 270 K 173 to 3 C 280 to 26 F and pressures from 360 to 700 MPa 52 000 to 102 000 psi 3 600 to 6 900 atm and C2 are all stable solid phases of a mixture of H2 and H2O molecules formed at high pressures 121 78 Although sometimes referred to as clathrate hydrates or clathrates they lack the cagelike structure generally found in clathrate hydrates and are more properly referred to as filled ices 121 The filled ice is then placed in a vacuum and the temperature gradually increased until the hydrogen frees itself from the crystal structure 78 If kept at a temperature range between 110 and 120 K 163 and 153 C 262 and 244 F after about two hours the structure will have emptied itself of any detectable hydrogen molecules 77 The resulting form is metastable at room pressure while under 120 K 153 C 244 F but collapses into ice Ih ordinary ice when brought above 130 K 143 C 226 F 78 The crystal structure is hexagonal in nature and the pores are helical channels with a diameter of about 6 10 A 6 10 10 10 m 2 40 10 8 in 77 78 Cubic ice edit It was reported in 2020 that cubic ice based on heavy water D2O can be formed from ice XVII 29 This was done by heating specifically prepared D2O ice XVII powder 29 The result was free of structural deformities compared to standard cubic ice or ice Isd 29 This discovery was reported around the same time another research group announced that they were able to obtain pure D2O cubic ice by first synthesizing filled ice in the C2 phase and then decompressing it 123 Ice XVIII superionic water edit nbsp In the absence of an applied electric field H ions diffuse in the O2 lattice nbsp When an electric field is applied H ions migrate towards the anode A remarkable characteristic of superionic ice is its ability to act as a conductor In 1988 predictions of the so called superionic water state were made 124 In superionic water water molecules break apart and the oxygen ions crystallize into an evenly spaced lattice while the hydrogen ions float around freely within the oxygen lattice 125 The freely mobile hydrogen ions make superionic water almost as conductive as typical metals making it a superionic conductor 79 The ice appears black in color 126 127 It is distinct from ionic water which is a hypothetical liquid state characterized by a disordered soup of hydrogen and oxygen ions The initial evidence came from optical measurements of laser heated water in a diamond anvil cell 128 and from optical measurements of water shocked by extremely powerful lasers 126 The first definitive evidence for the crystal structure of the oxygen lattice in superionic water came from x ray measurements on laser shocked water which were reported in 2019 79 In 2005 Laurence Fried led a team at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory to recreate the formative conditions of superionic water Using a technique involving smashing water molecules between diamonds and super heating it with lasers they observed frequency shifts which indicated that a phase transition had taken place The team also created computer models which indicated that they had indeed created superionic water 129 In 2013 Hugh F Wilson Michael L Wong and Burkhard Militzer at the University of California Berkeley published a paper predicting the face centered cubic lattice structure that would emerge at higher pressures 130 Additional experimental evidence was found by Marius Millot and colleagues in 2018 by inducing high pressure on water between diamonds and then shocking the water using a laser pulse 126 127 As of 2013 update it is theorized that superionic ice can possess two crystalline structures At pressures in excess of 50 GPa 7 300 000 psi it is predicted that superionic ice would take on a body centered cubic structure However at pressures in excess of 100 GPa and temperatures above 2000 K it is predicted that the structure would shift to a more stable face centered cubic lattice 130 In 2018 researchers at LLNL squeezed water between two pieces of diamond with a pressure of 2 500 MPa 360 000 psi The water was squeezed into Ice VII which is 60 percent denser than normal water 131 The compressed ice was then transported to the University of Rochester where it was blasted by a pulse of laser light The reaction created conditions like those inside of ice giants such as Uranus and Neptune by heating up the ice thousands of degrees under a pressure a million times greater than the Earth s atmosphere in only 10 to 20 billionths of a second The experiment concluded that the current in the conductive water was indeed carried by ions rather than electrons and thus pointed to the water being superionic 131 More recent experiments from the same Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory team used x ray crystallography on laser shocked water droplets to determine that the oxygen ions enter a face centered cubic phase which was dubbed ice XVIII and reported in the journal Nature in May 2019 79 Ice XIX edit The first report regarding ice XIX was published in 2018 by Thomas Loerting s group from Austria 80 They quenched HCl doped ice VI to 77 K at different pressures between 1 0 and 1 8 GPa to collect differential scanning calorimetry DSC thermograms dielectric spectrum Raman spectrum and X ray diffraction patterns In the DSC signals there was an endothermic feature at about 110 K in addition to the endotherm corresponding to the ice XV VI transition Additionally the Raman spectra dielectric properties and the ratio of the lattice parameters differed from those of ice XV Based on these observations they proposed the existence of a second hydrogen ordered phase of ice VI naming it ice beta XV In 2019 Alexander Rosu Finsen and Christoph Salzman argued that there was no need to consider this to be a new phase of ice and proposed a deep glassy state scenario 132 According to their DSC data the size of the endothermic feature depends not only on quench recovery pressure but also on the heating rate and annealing duration at 93 K They also collected neutron diffraction profiles of quench recovered deuterium chloride doped D2O ice VI XV prepared at different pressures of 1 0 1 4 and 1 8 GPa to show that there were no significant differences among them They concluded that the low temperature endotherm originated from kinetic features related to glass transitions of deep glassy states of disordered ice VI Distinguishing between the two scenarios new hydrogen ordered phase vs deep glassy disordered ice VI became an open question and the debate between the two groups has continued Thoeny et al Loerting s group 133 collected another series of Raman spectra of ice beta XV and reported that i ice XV prepared by the protocol reported previously contains both ice XV and ice beta XV domains ii upon heating Raman spectra of ice beta XV showed loss of H order In contrast Salzmann s group again argued for the plausibility of a deep glassy state scenario based on neutron diffraction and neutron inelastic scattering experiments 134 Based on their experimental results ice VI and deep glassy ice VI share very similar features based on both elastic diffraction scattering and inelastic scattering experiments and are different from the properties of ice XV In 2021 further crystallographic evidence for a new phase ice XIX was individually reported by three groups Yamane et al Hiroyuki Kagi and Kazuki Komatsu s group from Japan Gasser et al Loerting s group and Salzmann s group Yamane et al 82 collected neutron diffraction profiles in situ i e under high pressure and found new Bragg features completely different from both ice VI and ice XV They performed Rietveld refinement of the profiles based on the 2 2 1 displaystyle sqrt 2 times sqrt 2 times 1 nbsp supercell of ice XV and proposed some leading candidates for the space group of ice XIX P 4 Pca21 Pcc2 P21 a and P21 c They also measured dielectric spectra in situ and determined phase boundaries of ices VI XV XIX They found that the sign of the slope of the boundary turns negative from positive at 1 6 GPa indicating the existence of two different phases by the Clausius Clapeyron relation Gasser et al 135 also collected powder neutron diffractograms of quench recovered ices VI XV and XIX and found similar crystallographic features to those reported by Yamane et al concluding that P 4 and Pcc2 are the plausible space group candidates Both Yamane et al s and Gasser et al s results suggested a partially hydrogen ordered structure Gasser et al also found an isotope effect using DSC the low temperature endotherm for DCl doped D2O ice XIX was significantly smaller than that of HCl doped H2O ice XIX and that doping of 0 5 of H2O into D2O is sufficient for the ordering transition Several months later Salzmann et al published a paper based on in situ powder neutron diffraction experiments of ice XIX 136 In a change from their previous reports they accepted the idea of the new phase ice XIX as they observed similar features to the previous two reports However they refined their diffraction profiles based on a disordered structural model Pbcn and argued that new Bragg reflections can be explained by distortions of ice VI so ice XIX may still be regarded as a deep glassy state of ice VI The crystal structure of ice XIX including hydrogen order disorder is still under debate as of 2022 Practical implications editEarth s natural environment edit nbsp Photograph showing details of an ice cube under magnification Ice Ih is the form of ice commonly seen on Earth nbsp Phase space of ice Ih with respect to other ice phases Virtually all ice in the biosphere is ice Ih pronounced ice one h also known as ice phase one Ice Ih exhibits many peculiar properties that are relevant to the existence of life and regulation of global climate 137 For instance its density is lower than that of liquid water This is attributed to the presence of hydrogen bonds which causes atoms to become closer in the liquid phase 138 Because of this ice Ih floats on water which is highly unusual when compared to other materials The solid phase of materials is usually more closely and neatly packed and has a higher density than the liquid phase When lakes freeze they do so only at the surface while the bottom of the lake remains near 4 C 277 K 39 F because water is densest at this temperature This anomalous behavior of water and ice is what allows fish to survive harsh winters The density of ice Ih increases when cooled down to about 211 C 62 K 348 F below that temperature the ice expands again negative thermal expansion 5 6 Besides ice Ih a small amount of ice Ic may occasionally present in the upper atmosphere clouds 139 It is believed to be responsible for the observation of Scheiner s halo a rare ring that occurs near 28 degrees from the Sun or the Moon 140 However many atmospheric samples which were previously described as cubic ice were later shown to be stacking disordered ice with trigonal symmetry 141 142 143 and it has been dubbed the most faceted ice phase in a literal and a more general sense 144 The first true samples of cubic ice were only reported in 2020 30 123 Low density ASW LDA also known as hyperquenched glassy water may be responsible for noctilucent clouds on Earth and is usually formed by deposition of water vapor in cold or vacuum conditions Ice clouds form at and below the Earth s high latitude mesopause 90 km where temperatures have been observed to fall as to below 100 K 145 It has been suggested that homogeneous nucleation of ice particles results in low density amorphous ice 146 Amorphous ice is likely confined to the coldest parts of the clouds and stacking disordered ice I is thought to dominate elsewhere in these polar mesospheric clouds 147 In 2018 ice VII was identified among inclusions found in natural diamonds 148 Due to this demonstration that ice VII exists in nature the International Mineralogical Association duly classified ice VII as a distinct mineral 149 The ice VII was presumably formed when water trapped inside the diamonds retained the high pressure of the deep mantle due to the strength and rigidity of the diamond lattice but cooled down to surface temperatures producing the required environment of high pressure without high temperature 150 Ice XI is thought to be a more stable conformation than ice Ih and so it may form on Earth However the transformation is very slow According to one report in Antarctic conditions it is estimated to take at least 100 000 years to form without the assistance of catalysts citation needed Ice XI was sought and found in Antarctic ice that was about 100 years old in 1998 151 A further study in 2004 was not able to reproduce this finding however after studying Antarctic ice which was around 3000 years old 152 The 1998 Antarctic study also claimed that the transformation temperature ice XI gt ice Ih is 36 C 237 K which is far higher than the temperature of the expected triple point mentioned above 72 K 0 Pa Ice XI was also found in experiments using pure water at very low temperature 10 K and low pressure conditions thought to be present in the upper atmosphere 153 Recently small domains of ice XI were found to form in pure water its phase transition back to ice Ih occurred at 72 K while under hydrostatic pressure conditions of up to 70 MPa 154 Human industry edit Amorphous ice is used in some scientific experiments especially in cryo electron microscopy of biomolecules 155 The individual molecules can be preserved for imaging in a state close to what they are in liquid water Ice XVII can repeatedly adsorb and release hydrogen molecules without degrading its structure 77 The total amount of hydrogen that ice XVII can adsorb depends on the amount of pressure applied but hydrogen molecules can be adsorbed by ice XVII even at pressures as low as a few millibars a if the temperature is under 40 K 233 2 C 387 7 F 77 The adsorbed hydrogen molecules can then be released or desorbed through the application of heat 156 This was an unexpected property of ice XVII and could allow it to be used for hydrogen storage an issue often mentioned in environmental technology 156 Aside from storing hydrogen via compression or liquification it can also be stored within a solid substance either via a reversible chemical process chemisorption or by having the hydrogen molecules attach to the substance via the van der Waals force physisorption The latter process can occur within ice XVII 156 In physisorption there is no chemical reaction and the chemical bond between the two atoms within a hydrogen molecule remains intact Because of this the number of adsorption desorption cycles ice XVII can withstand is theoretically infinite 156 One significant advantage of using ice XVII as a hydrogen storage medium is the low cost of the only two chemicals involved hydrogen and water 156 In addition ice XVII has shown the ability to store hydrogen at an H2 to H2O molar ratio above 40 higher than the theoretical maximum ratio for sII clathrate hydrates another potential storage medium 77 However if ice XVII is used as a storage medium it must be kept under a temperature of 130 K 143 C 226 F or risk being destabilized 156 Outer space edit In outer space hexagonal crystalline ice the predominant form found on Earth is extremely rare Known examples are typically associated with volcanic action 157 Water in the interstellar medium is instead dominated by amorphous ice making it likely the most common form of water in the universe 158 34 Amorphous ice can be separated from crystalline ice based on its near infrared and infrared spectrum At near IR wavelengths the characteristics of the 1 65 3 1 and 4 53 mm water absorption lines are dependent on the ice temperature and crystal order 159 The peak strength of the 1 65 mm band as well as the structure of the 3 1 mm band are particularly useful in identifying the crystallinity of water ice 160 161 At longer IR wavelengths amorphous and crystalline ice have characteristically different absorption bands at 44 and 62 mm in that the crystalline ice has significant absorption at 62 mm while amorphous ice does not 162 In addition these bands can be used as a temperature indicator at very low temperatures where other indicators such as the 3 1 and 12 mm bands fail 163 This is useful studying ice in the interstellar medium and circumstellar disks However observing these features is difficult because the atmosphere is opaque at these wavelengths requiring the use of space based infrared observatories Properties of the amorphous ice in the Solar System edit In general amorphous ice can form below 130 K 164 At this temperature water molecules are unable to form the crystalline structure commonly found on Earth Amorphous ice may also form in the coldest region of the Earth s atmosphere the summer polar mesosphere where noctilucent clouds exist 165 These low temperatures are readily achieved in astrophysical environments such as molecular clouds circumstellar disks and the surfaces of objects in the outer Solar System In the laboratory amorphous ice transforms into crystalline ice if it is heated above 130 K although the exact temperature of this conversion is dependent on the environment and ice growth conditions 166 The reaction is irreversible and exothermic releasing 1 26 1 6 kJ mol 166 An additional factor in determining the structure of water ice is deposition rate Even if it is cold enough to form amorphous ice crystalline ice will form if the flux of water vapor onto the substrate is less than a temperature dependent critical flux 167 This effect is important to consider in astrophysical environments where the water flux can be low Conversely amorphous ice can be formed at temperatures higher than expected if the water flux is high such as flash freezing events associated with cryovolcanism At temperatures less than 77 K irradiation from ultraviolet photons as well as high energy electrons and ions can damage the structure of crystalline ice transforming it into amorphous ice 168 162 Amorphous ice does not appear to be significantly affected by radiation at temperatures less than 110 K though some experiments suggest that radiation might lower the temperature at which amorphous ice begins to crystallize 162 Peter Jenniskens and David F Blake demonstrated in 1994 that a form of high density amorphous ice is also created during vapor deposition of water on low temperature lt 30 K surfaces such as interstellar grains The water molecules do not fully align to create the open cage structure of low density amorphous ice Many water molecules end up at interstitial positions When warmed above 30 K the structure re aligns and transforms into the low density form 35 41 Molecular clouds circumstellar disks and the primordial solar nebula edit Molecular clouds have extremely low temperatures 10 K falling well within the amorphous ice regime The presence of amorphous ice in molecular clouds has been observationally confirmed 169 When molecular clouds collapse to form stars the temperature of the resulting circumstellar disk isn t expected to rise above 120 K indicating that the majority of the ice should remain in an amorphous state 167 However if the temperature rises high enough to sublimate the ice then it can re condense into a crystalline form since the water flux rate is so low This is expected to be the case in the circumstellar disk of IRAS 09371 1212 where signatures of crystallized ice were observed despite a low temperature of 30 70 K 170 For the primordial solar nebula there is much uncertainty as to the crystallinity of water ice during the circumstellar disk and planet formation phases If the original amorphous ice survived the molecular cloud collapse then it should have been preserved at heliocentric distances beyond Saturn s orbit 12 AU 167 Comets edit The possibility of the presence of amorphous water ice in comets and the release of energy during the phase transition to a crystalline state was first proposed as a mechanism for comet outbursts 171 Evidence of amorphous ice in comets is found in the high levels of activity observed in long period Centaur and Jupiter Family comets at heliocentric distances beyond 6 AU 172 These objects are too cold for the sublimation of water ice which drives comet activity closer to the Sun to have much of an effect Thermodynamic models show that the surface temperatures of those comets are near the amorphous crystalline ice transition temperature of 130 K supporting this as a likely source of the activity 173 The runaway crystallization of amorphous ice can produce the energy needed to power outbursts such as those observed for Centaur Comet 29P Schwassmann Wachmann 1 174 175 Kuiper Belt objects edit With radiation equilibrium temperatures of 40 50 K 176 the objects in the Kuiper Belt are expected to have amorphous water ice While water ice has been observed on several objects 177 178 the extreme faintness of these objects makes it difficult to determine the structure of the ices The signatures of crystalline water ice was observed on 50000 Quaoar perhaps due to resurfacing events such as impacts or cryovolcanism 179 Icy moons edit The Near Infrared Mapping Spectrometer NIMS on NASA s Galileo spacecraft spectroscopically mapped the surface ice of the Jovian satellites Europa Ganymede and Callisto The temperatures of these moons range from 90 to 160 K 180 warm enough that amorphous ice is expected to crystallize on relatively short timescales However it was found that Europa has primarily amorphous ice Ganymede has both amorphous and crystalline ice and Callisto is primarily crystalline 181 This is thought to be the result of competing forces the thermal crystallization of amorphous ice versus the conversion of crystalline to amorphous ice by the flux of charged particles from Jupiter Closer to Jupiter than the other three moons Europa receives the highest level of radiation and thus through irradiation has the most amorphous ice Callisto is the farthest from Jupiter receiving the lowest radiation flux and therefore maintaining its crystalline ice Ganymede which lies between the two exhibits amorphous ice at high latitudes and crystalline ice at the lower latitudes This is thought to be the result of the moon s intrinsic magnetic field which would funnel the charged particles to higher latitudes and protect the lower latitudes from irradiation 181 Ganymede s interior probably includes a liquid water ocean with tens to hundreds of kilometers of ice V at its base 182 The surface ice of Saturn s moon Enceladus was mapped by the Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer VIMS on the NASA ESA ASI Cassini space probe The probe found both crystalline and amorphous ice with a higher degree of crystallinity at the tiger stripe cracks on the surface and more amorphous ice between these regions 159 The crystalline ice near the tiger stripes could be explained by higher temperatures caused by geological activity that is the suspected cause of the cracks The amorphous ice might be explained by flash freezing from cryovolcanism rapid condensation of molecules from water geysers or irradiation of high energy particles from Saturn 159 Similarly one of one of the inner layers of Titan is believed to contain ice VI 183 Medium density amorphous ice may be present on Europa as the experimental conditions of its formation are expected to occur there as well It is possible that the MDA ice s unique property of releasing a large amount of heat energy after being released from compression could be responsible for ice quakes within the thick ice layers 21 Planets edit Because ice XI can theoretically form at low pressures at temperatures between 50 70 K temperatures present in astrophysical environments of the outer solar system and within permanently shaded polar craters on the Moon and Mercury Ice XI forms most easily around 70 K paradoxically it takes longer to form at lower temperatures Extrapolating from experimental measurements it is estimated to take 50 years to form at 70 K and 300 million years at 50 K 184 It is theorized to be present in places like the upper atmospheres of Uranus and Neptune 106 and on Pluto and Charon 184 Ice VII may comprise the ocean floor of Europa as well as extrasolar planets such as Awohali and Enaiposha that are largely made of water 185 186 Small domains of ice XI could exist in the atmospheres of Jupiter and Saturn as well 106 The fact that small domains of ice XI can exist at temperatures up to 111 K has some scientists speculating that it may be fairly common in interstellar space with small nucleation seeds spreading through space and converting regular ice much like the fabled ice nine mentioned in Vonnegut s Cat s Cradle 106 187 The possible roles of ice XI in interstellar space 184 188 and planet formation 189 have been the subject of several research papers Until observational confirmation of ice XI in outer space is made the presence of ice XI in space remains controversial owing to the aforementioned criticism raised by Iitaka 190 The infrared absorption spectra of ice XI was studied in 2009 in preparation for searches for ice XI in space 191 It is theorized that the ice giant 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J Hamel Sebastien 2021 Phase behaviours of superionic water at planetary conditions Nature Physics 17 11 1228 1232 arXiv 2103 09035 doi 10 1038 s41567 021 01334 9 S2CID 232240463 Chau Ricky Hamel Sebastien Nellis William J 2011 Chemical processes in the deep interior of Uranus Nature Communications 2 Article number 203 doi 10 1038 ncomms1198 PMID 21343921 Wang Yanchao 29 November 2011 High pressure partially ionic phase of water ice Nature Communications 2 563 doi 10 1038 ncomms1566 PMID 22127059 Further reading editIce phases www idc online com Fletcher N H 2009 06 04 The Chemical Physics of Ice ISBN 9780521112307 Petrenko Victor F Whitworth Robert W 1999 08 19 Physics of Ice ISBN 9780191581342 Chaplin Martin 2007 11 11 Hexagonal ice structure Water Structure and Science Retrieved 2008 01 02 London South Bank University Report Physik des Eises PDF in German iktp tu dresden de External links editHunsberger Maren September 21 2018 A New State of Water Reveals a Hidden Ocean in Earth s Mantle Seeker Archived from the original on 2021 12 21 via YouTube Woo Marcus July 11 2018 The Hunt for Earth s Deep Hidden Oceans Quanta Magazine Discussion of amorphous ice at LSBU s website Glass transition in hyperquenched water from Nature requires registration Glassy Water from Science on phase diagrams of water requires registration AIP accounting discovery of VHDA HDA in space Computerized illustrations of molecular structure of HDA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Phases of ice amp oldid 1222989067 Known phases, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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