Microscopic structure of water at elevated pressures and temperatures

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Abstract

We report on the microscopic structure of water at sub- and supercritical conditions studied using X-ray Raman spectroscopy, ab initio molecular dynamics simulations, and density functional theory. Systematic changes in the X-ray Raman spectra with increasing pressure and temperature are observed. Throughout the studied thermodynamic range, the experimental spectra can be interpreted with a structural model obtained from the molecular dynamics simulations. A spatial statistical analysis using Ripley's K-function shows that this model is homogeneous on the nanometer length scale. According to the simulations, distortions of the hydrogen-bond network increase dramatically when temperature and pressure increase to the supercritical regime. In particular, the average number of hydrogen bonds per molecule decreases to ≈0.6at600 °C and p = 134 MPa.

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Sahle, C. J., Sternemann, C., Schmidt, C., Lehtola, S., Jahn, S., Simonelli, L., … Wilke, M. (2013). Microscopic structure of water at elevated pressures and temperatures. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 110(16), 6301–6306. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1220301110

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