Ice-VII

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Royal
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Ice-VII

Post by Royal » Wed May 15, 2019 8:01 am

Weird water phase “ice-VII” can grow as fast as 1,000 miles per hour
Science of fiction: Exotic form of ice could freeze an alien ocean in a few hours.
Jennifer Ouellette - 10/24/2018, 5:49 AM



Kurt Vonnegut's 1963 novel Cat's Cradle introduced the world to so-called "Ice Nine," a fictional form of water that freezes at room temperature. If it so much as touches a drop of regular water, that will freeze, too, and so on, spreading so rapidly that it freezes everything that comes into contact with it.

Fortunately for Earth, Ice-Nine doesn't exist. But there is an exotic form of ice dubbed "ice VII" that physicists can create in the laboratory. It's harmless in terrestrial conditions. But on an ocean world like Jupiter's moon, Europa, it could behave just like Ice-Nine under the right conditions, freezing an entire world within hours—with some key implications for the possibility of finding life on distant exoplanets. Now we know more about just how that special freezing process occurs, according to a recent paper in Physical Review Letters.

It's the shape formed by the water molecules that determine which phase of ice you get. That ice in your glass of whiskey is technically ice Ih—"h" for hexagon, since that's the shape that all the oxygen atoms line up in during freezing. But in theory, there should be at least 17 different crystalline phases of water—which one you get depends on the pressure and temperature of any given environment.

https://arstechnica.com/science/2018/10 ... -per-hour/


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Pigeon
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Re: Ice-VII

Post by Pigeon » Wed May 15, 2019 12:55 pm

New meaning to Flash Frozen.

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Pigeon
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Re: Ice-VII

Post by Pigeon » Wed May 15, 2019 9:56 pm

Recently at the Laboratory for Laser Energetics in Brighton, New York, one of the world's most powerful lasers blasted a droplet of water, creating a shock wave that raised the water's pressure to millions of atmospheres and its temperature to thousands of degrees. X-rays that beamed through the droplet in the same fraction of a second offered humanity's first glimpse of water under those extreme conditions. The x-rays revealed that the water inside the shock wave didn't become a superheated liquid or gas. Paradoxically -- but just as physicists squinting at screens in an adjacent room had expected -- the atoms froze solid, forming crystalline ice.

"You hear the shot," said Marius Millot of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California, and "right away you see that something interesting was happening." Millot co-led the experiment with Federica Coppari, also of Lawrence Livermore. The findings, published this week in Nature, confirm the existence of "superionic ice," a new phase of water with bizarre properties. Unlike the familiar ice found in your freezer or at the north pole, superionic ice is black and hot. A cube of it would weigh four times as much as a normal one. It was first theoretically predicted more than 30 years ago, and although it has never been seen until now, scientists think it might be among the most abundant forms of water in the universe.

Link

Superionic ice can now claim the mantle of ice XVIII.

Ice XVIII at Wired

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Royal
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Re: Ice-VII

Post by Royal » Wed May 15, 2019 10:15 pm

University, it’s not quite a new phase of water. “It’s really a new state of matter,” she said, “which is rather spectacular.”

Should be more news behind that statement.

Physicists have been after superionic ice for years—ever since a primitive computer simulation led by Pierfranco Demontis in 1988 predicted water would take on this strange, almost metal-like form if you pushed it beyond the map of known ice phases.

Under extreme pressure and heat, the simulations suggested, water molecules break. With the oxygen atoms locked in a cubic lattice, “the hydrogens now start to jump from one position in the crystal to another, and jump again, and jump again,” Millot said. The jumps between lattice sites are so fast that the hydrogen atoms—which are ionized, making them essentially positively charged protons—appear to move like a liquid.

This suggested superionic ice would conduct electricity, like a metal, with the hydrogens playing the usual role of electrons. Having these loose hydrogen atoms gushing around would also boost the ice’s disorder, or entropy. In turn, that increase in entropy would make this ice much more stable than other kinds of ice crystals, causing its melting point to soar upward.

Superionic ice conducts electricity. I wonder if this discovery can play a role in pushing away meteors and comets.

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Pigeon
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Re: Ice-VII

Post by Pigeon » Wed May 15, 2019 11:05 pm

I wonder what object would be made of it.

Make a Battery pack/beverage cooler.

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Royal
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Re: Ice-VII

Post by Royal » Wed May 15, 2019 11:07 pm

Pigeon wrote:I wonder what object would be made of it.

Make a Battery pack/beverage cooler.
Elon to send Craft Brew to mars.

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