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WATER WORLD
Potential energy surfaces of water mapped for the first time
by Staff Writers
Berlin, Germany (SPX) Jul 14, 2022

Liquids are more difficult to describe than gases or crystalline solids. Now an HZB team has succeeded in mapping the energy surfaces of water molecules, a first step to understand water's chemical behaviour. (stock image only)

Water is certainly the best-known liquid in the world. Water plays a crucial role in all biological and many chemical processes. The water molecules themselves hardly hold any secrets. In school already we learn that water consists of one oxygen atom and two hydrogen atoms. We even know the typical obtuse angle that the two O-H legs form with each other.

In addition, we know when water boils or freezes and how these phase transitions are related to pressure. But between facts on individual molecules and a deeper understanding of the macroscopic phenomena, there is a wide area of uncertainty: Only statistical information is known about the behaviour of the individual molecules in normal liquid water: the water molecules in the liquid phase form a fluctuating network of hydrogen bonds, disordered and dense, and their interactions are not at all as well understood as in the gaseous state.

Pure liquid water examined Now, a team led by HZB physicist Dr. Annette Pietzsch has taken a closer look at pure liquid water at room temperature and normal pressure. Using X-ray analysis at the Swiss Light Source of the Paul Scherrer Institute and statistical modelling, the scientists have succeeded in mapping the so-called potential energy surfaces of the individual water molecules in the ground state, which come in a large variety of shapes depending on their environment.

Oscillations and vibrations measured "The special thing here is the method: we studied the water molecules on the ADRESS beamline using resonant inelastic X-ray scattering. Simply put, we nudged individual molecules very carefully and then measured how they fell back into the ground state," says Pietzsch. The low-energy excitations led to stretching oscillations and other vibrations, which - combined with model calculations - produced a detailed picture of the potential surfaces.

"This gives us a method to experimentally determine the energy of a molecule as a function of its structure," explains Pietzsch. "The results help to enlighten the chemistry in water, for example to understand better how water behaves as a solvent."

Outlook: METRIXS at BESSY II The next experiments are already planned at the BESSY II X-ray source at HZB. There, Annette Pietzsch and her team have set up the METRIXS measuring station, which is designed precisely for investigating liquid samples with RIXS experiments. "After the summer shutdown due to maintenance work on BESSY II, we will start with the first tests of our instruments. And then we can move on."

Research Report:Cuts through the manifold of molecular H2O potential energy surfaces in liquid water at ambient conditions


Related Links
Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin fur Materialien und Energie
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics


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A mineral spa in northern Iraq is regaining popularity as renovation work has brought back visitors, in a city once ruled by jihadists who carried out mass executions. Hisham Khaled often visited the Hamam al-Alil baths as a child with his father but since the facility's restoration he comes alone. His father, a policeman, was executed near the baths by the Islamic State (IS) group in 2016. Located 30 kilometres (20 miles) south of Mosul, Hamam al-Alil - meaning the baths of the sick in Ar ... read more

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