Pinpointing the Liquid-Liquid Critical Point Location in Supercooled Water

Pinpointing the Liquid-Liquid Critical Point Location in Supercooled Water
English

The fascinating hypothesis that supercooled water may segregate into two distinct liquid phases, each with unique structures and densities, was first posited in a seminal study by Poole, Sciortino, Essman and Stanley in 1992. This idea, initially based on numerical analyses with a water-like empirical potential, challenged conventional understanding of water’s phase behavior at the time and has since intrigued the scientific community. Over the past three decades, advancements in computational modeling – particularly through the advent of data-driven many-body potentials rigorously derived from “first principles” and augmented by the efficiency of neural networks – have significantly enhanced the accuracy of molecular simulations, enabling the exploration of the phase behavior of water with unprecedented realism. This study leverages these computational advances to probe the liquid-liquid transition in supercooled water. For the first time, microsecond-long simulations with chemical accuracy, conducted over several years, provide compelling evidence that water indeed exists in two discernibly distinct liquid states at low temperature and high pressure. By pinpointing a realistic estimate for the location of the liquid-liquid critical point, our study not only advances current understanding of water’s anomalous behavior but also establishes a basis for experimental validation.

Authors: Francesco Sciortino, Yaoguang Zhai, Sigbjørn L. Bore, Francesco Paesani

Article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41567-024-02761-0
 

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