posted on 2011-12-08, 00:00authored byKatrin Winkel, Erwin Mayer, Thomas Loerting
We investigate the downstroke transition from high- (HDA) to low-density amorphous ice (LDA) at 140 (H2O) and 143 K (D2O). The visual observation of sudden phase separation at 0.07 GPa is evidence of the first-order character of the transition. Powder X-ray diffractograms recorded on chips recovered from the propagating front show a double halo peak indicative of the simultaneous presence of LDA and HDA. By contrast, chips picked from different parts of the sample cylinder show either HDA or LDA. Growth of the low-density form takes place randomly somewhere inside of the high-density matrix. The thermal stability of HDA against transformation to LDA at ambient pressure significantly increases with decreasing recovery pressure and reaches its maximum at 0.07 GPa. A sample decompressed to 0.07 GPa is by ∼17 K more stable than an unannealed HDA sample. An increasingly relaxed nature of the sample is also evident from the progressive disappearance of the broad calorimetric relaxation exotherm, preceding the sharp transition to LDA. Finally, we show that two independent thermodynamic paths lead to a very similar state of (relaxed) HDA at 140 K and 0.2 GPa. We argue that these observations imply an equilibrated nature of the amorphous sample in the pressure range of p ≲ 0.2 GPa and speculate that the observation of macroscopic phase separation involves two ultraviscous liquid phases at 140 K. This supports the scenario of a first-order liquid–liquid transition in bulk water.