Anomalous scattering in supercooled ST2 water |
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Authors: | Jingxiang Guo Rakesh S. Singh |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Houston , Houston, TX, USA;2. Department of Chemistry, Johns Hopkins University , Baltimore, MD, USA |
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Abstract: | ![]() ABSTRACTLarge-scale molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of systems containing up to 256,000 molecules were performed to investigate the scattering behaviour of the ST2 water model at deeply supercooled conditions. The simulations reveal that ST2 exhibits anomalous scattering, reminiscent of that observed in experiment, which is characterised by an increase in the static structure factor at low wavenumbers. This unusual behaviour in ST2 is linked with coupled fluctuations in density and local tetrahedral order in the liquid. The Ornstein–Zernike correlation length estimated from the anomalous scattering component exhibits power-law growth upon cooling, consistent with the existence of a liquid–liquid critical point (LLCP) in the ST2 model at ca. 245 K. Further, spontaneous liquid–liquid phase separation is observed upon thermally quenching a large system with 256,000 water molecules below the predicted critical temperature into the two-phase region. The large-scale MD simulations therefore confirm the existence of a metastable liquid–liquid phase transition in ST2 and support findings from previous computational studies performed using smaller systems containing only a few hundred molecules. We anticipate that our analysis may prove useful in interpreting recent scattering experiments that have been performed to search for an LLCP in deeply supercooled water. |
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Keywords: | Liquid–liquid transition X-ray scattering compressibility anomalies correlation length supercooled water |
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