Electrofreezing of Liquid Water at Ambient Conditions

Abstract

Water is routinely exposed to external electric fields (EFs). Whether, e.g., at physiological conditions, in contact with biological systems, or at the interface of polar surfaces in countless technological and industrial settings, water responds to EFs on the order of a few V/ in a manner that is still under intense investigation. Dating back to the 19th century, the possibility of solidifying water upon applying an EF instead of adjusting temperature and pressure -- a process known as electrofreezing -- is an alluring promise that has canalized major efforts since, with uncertain outcomes. In this work, we perform long ab initio molecular dynamics simulations blackof water at ambient conditions exposed at EFs of different intensities. While the response of single water molecules is almost instantaneous, the cooperativity of the hydrogen bonds induces slower reorganizations that can be captured by dividing the trajectories in disjoint time windows and by performing analysis on each of them separately. Upon adopting this approach, we find that EFs of 0.10≤EFs≤0.15~V/ induce electrofreezing blackoccurring after 150~ps. We observe a continuous transition to a disordered state characterized by frozen dynamical properties, damped oscillations, lower energy, and enhanced local structural properties. Therefore, we ascribe this state to a new ferroelectric amorphous phase, which we term f-GW (ferroelectric glassy water). Our work represents the first evidence of electrofreezing of liquid water at ambient conditions and therefore impacts several fields, from blackfundamental chemical physics to biology blackand catalysis.

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