Literature DB >> 34321671

Spectroscopic evidence for a gold-coloured metallic water solution.

Philip E Mason1, H Christian Schewe1,2, Tillmann Buttersack1,2,3, Vojtech Kostal1, Marco Vitek1, Ryan S McMullen3, Hebatallah Ali2,4, Florian Trinter2,5,6, Chin Lee2,7,8, Daniel M Neumark7,8, Stephan Thürmer9, Robert Seidel10,11, Bernd Winter2, Stephen E Bradforth3, Pavel Jungwirth12.   

Abstract

Insulating materials can in principle be made metallic by applying pressure. In the case of pure water, this is estimated1 to require a pressure of 48 megabar, which is beyond current experimental capabilities and may only exist in the interior of large planets or stars2-4. Indeed, recent estimates and experiments indicate that water at pressures accessible in the laboratory will at best be superionic with high protonic conductivity5, but not metallic with conductive electrons1. Here we show that a metallic water solution can be prepared by massive doping with electrons upon reacting water with alkali metals. Although analogous metallic solutions of liquid ammonia with high concentrations of solvated electrons have long been known and characterized6-9, the explosive interaction between alkali metals and water10,11 has so far only permitted the preparation of aqueous solutions with low, submetallic electron concentrations12-14. We found that the explosive behaviour of the water-alkali metal reaction can be suppressed by adsorbing water vapour at a low pressure of about 10-4 millibar onto liquid sodium-potassium alloy drops ejected into a vacuum chamber. This set-up leads to the formation of a transient gold-coloured layer of a metallic water solution covering the metal alloy drops. The metallic character of this layer, doped with around 5 × 1021 electrons per cubic centimetre, is confirmed using optical reflection and synchrotron X-ray photoelectron spectroscopies.
© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 34321671     DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03646-5

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


  1 in total

1.  Water transformed into shiny, golden metal.

Authors:  Davide Castelvecchi
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2021-08       Impact factor: 49.962

  1 in total

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