posted on 2020-01-27, 20:47authored byAlexander Rosu-Finsen, Alfred Amon, Jeff Armstrong, Felix Fernandez-Alonso, Christoph G. Salzmann
The
recent discovery of a low-temperature endotherm upon heating
hydrochloric-acid-doped ice VI has sparked a vivid controversy. The
two competing explanations aiming to explain its origin range from
a new distinct crystalline phase of ice to deep-glassy states of the
well-known ice VI. Problems with the slow kinetics of deuterated phases
have been raised, which we circumvent here entirely by simultaneously
measuring the inelastic neutron spectra and neutron diffraction data
of H2O samples. These measurements support the deep-glassy
ice VI scenario and rule out alternative explanations. Additionally,
we show that the crystallographic model of D2O ice XV,
the ordered counterpart of ice VI, also applies to the corresponding
H2O phase. The discovery of deep-glassy ice VI now provides
a fascinating new example of ultrastable glasses that are encountered
across a wide range of other materials.