Literature DB >> 14973480

Clarifying the glass-transition behaviour of water by comparison with hyperquenched inorganic glasses.

Yuanzheng Yue1, C Austen Angell.   

Abstract

The formation of glasses is normal for substances that remain liquid over a wide temperature range (the 'good glassformers') and can be induced for most liquids if cooling is fast enough to bypass crystallization. During reheating but still below the melting point, good glassformers exhibit glass transitions as they abruptly transform into supercooled liquids, whereas other substances transform directly from the glassy to the crystalline state. Whether water exhibits a glass transition before crystallization has been much debated over five decades. For the last 20 years, the existence of a glass transition at 136 K (ref. 3) has been widely accepted, but the transition exhibits qualities difficult to reconcile with our current knowledge of glass transitions. Here we report detailed calorimetric characterizations of hyperquenched inorganic glasses that, when heated, do not crystallize before reaching their glass transition temperatures. We compare our results to the behaviour of glassy water and find that small endothermic effects, such as the one attributed to the glass transition of water, are only a 'shadow' of the real glass transition occurring at higher temperatures, thus substantiating the conclusion that the glass transition of water cannot be probed directly.

Entities:  

Year:  2004        PMID: 14973480     DOI: 10.1038/nature02295

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  12 in total

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4.  Liquid-like water confined in stacks of biological membranes at 200 k and its relation to protein dynamics.

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5.  Temperature-dependent macromolecular X-ray crystallography.

Authors:  Martin Weik; Jacques Philippe Colletier
Journal:  Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr       Date:  2010-03-24

6.  Irreversibility of pressure induced boron speciation change in glass.

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Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2014-01-20       Impact factor: 4.379

7.  How Water's Properties Are Encoded in Its Molecular Structure and Energies.

Authors:  Emiliano Brini; Christopher J Fennell; Marivi Fernandez-Serra; Barbara Hribar-Lee; Miha Lukšič; Ken A Dill
Journal:  Chem Rev       Date:  2017-09-26       Impact factor: 60.622

8.  A metal-organic framework with ultrahigh glass-forming ability.

Authors:  Ang Qiao; Thomas D Bennett; Haizheng Tao; Andraž Krajnc; Gregor Mali; Cara M Doherty; Aaron W Thornton; John C Mauro; G Neville Greaves; Yuanzheng Yue
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2018-03-09       Impact factor: 14.136

9.  Atomic and vibrational origins of mechanical toughness in bioactive cement during setting.

Authors:  Kun V Tian; Bin Yang; Yuanzheng Yue; Daniel T Bowron; Jerry Mayers; Robert S Donnan; Csaba Dobó-Nagy; John W Nicholson; De-Cai Fang; A Lindsay Greer; Gregory A Chass; G Neville Greaves
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2015-11-09       Impact factor: 14.919

10.  Water in Mesoporous Confinement: Glass-To-Liquid Transition or Freezing of Molecular Reorientation Dynamics?

Authors:  Wilfried Schranz; Viktor Soprunyuk
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2019-10-01       Impact factor: 4.411

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