Possible transition between two phases of supercooled liquid water, namely the low-and high-density liquid water, has been only predicted to occur below 230 K from molecular dynamics (MD) simulation. However, such a phase transition cannot be detected in the laboratory because of the so-called "no-man's land" under deeply supercooled condition, where only crystalline ices have been observed. Here, we show MD simulation evidence that, inside an isolated carbon nanotube (CNT) with a diameter of 1.25 nm, both lowand high-density liquid water states can be detected near ambient temperature and above ambient pressure. In the temperature-pressure phase diagram, the low-and high-density liquid water phases are separated by the hexagonal ice nanotube (hINT) phase, and the melting line terminates at the isochore end point near 292 K because of the retracting melting line from 292 to 278 K. Beyond the isochore end point (292 K), low-and high-density liquid becomes indistinguishable. When the pressure is increased from 10 to 600 MPa along the 280-K isotherm, we observe that water inside the 1.25-nm-diameter CNT can undergo low-density liquid to hINT to high-density liquid reentrant first-order transitions.
CITATION STYLE
Nomura, K., Kaneko, T., Bai, J., Francisco, J. S., Yasuoka, K., & Zeng, X. C. (2017). Evidence of low-density and high-density liquid phases and isochore end point for water confined to carbon nanotube. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 114(16), 4066–4071. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1701609114
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