There
are at least 20 solid forms of ice known to us. Recently, UNLV scientists have
discovered a new form of ice, redefining the properties of water at high
pressures.
Scientists
devised a new method to measure the properties of water under high pressure.
They started with squeezing a water sample between the tips of two
opposite-facing diamonds—freezing into several jumbled ice crystals. The ice
was then exposed to the laser-heating technique that melted it temporarily. It
then quickly reformed into a powder-like collection of tiny crystals.
By
gradually raising the pressure and intermittently obliterating it with a laser
beam, the group saw that the water ice moved from a known cubic stage, Ice-VII,
to the newfound intermediate and tetragonal stage, Ice-VIIt, before settling
into one more known stage, Ice-X.
This
transition to Ice-X occurs at much lower pressures than previously thought.
Zach
Grande, a UNLV Ph.D. student, said, “While it’s unlikely we’ll find this new
phase of ice anywhere on the surface of Earth, it is likely a common ingredient
within the mantle of Earth as well as in large moons and water-rich planets
outside of our solar system.”
Scientists
are continually working to understand the behavior of high-pressure water that
may be present in the interior of distant planets.
To do
so, scientists placed a water sample between the tips of diamond anvil cells.
They then applied a small force to the diamonds. This allowed scientists to
recreate pressures as high as those found at the center of the Earth.
Squeezing
water samples allowed scientists to drive the oxygen and hydrogen atoms into
various arrangements, including the newly discovered arrangement, Ice-VIIt.
Doing
so, scientists observed a new phase of water ice. At the same time, they found
that the transition to Ice-X occurred at pressures nearly three times lower
than previously thought—at 300,000 atmospheres instead of 1 million. This
transition has been a highly debated topic for several decades.
Grande
and UNLV physicist Ashkan Salamat said, “Zach’s work has demonstrated that this
transformation to an ionic state occurs at much, much lower pressures than
ever. It’s the missing piece and the most precise measurements on the water at
these conditions.”
“The
work also recalibrates our understanding of the composition of exoplanets. The
Ice-VIIt phase of ice could exist in abundance in the crust and upper mantle of
expected water-rich planets outside of our solar system, meaning they could
have conditions habitable for life.”
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