NMR Studies on the Temperature-Dependent Dynamics of Confined Water
Matthias Sattig, Stefan Reutter, Franz Fujara, Mayke Werner, Gerd, Buntkowsky, Michael Vogel

TL;DR
This study uses deuterium NMR to investigate how confined water in silica pores exhibits temperature-dependent rotational dynamics, revealing crossovers related to interface effects and glass transition-like behavior.
Contribution
It provides detailed insights into the dynamic crossover phenomena of supercooled water confined in silica pores, distinguishing between bulk-like and interface-dominated dynamics.
Findings
Identification of two temperature crossovers in water dynamics.
Evidence for a glass transition-like behavior at ~185 K.
Confinement size influences high-temperature alpha process but not low-temperature beta process.
Abstract
We use H NMR to study the rotational motion of supercooled water in silica pores of various diameters, specifically, in the MCM-41 materials C10, C12, and C14. Combination of spin-lattice relaxation, line-shape, and stimulated-echo analyses allows us to determine correlation times in very broad time and temperature ranges. For the studied pore diameters, 2.1-2.9 nm, we find two crossovers in the temperature-dependent correlation times of liquid water upon cooling. At 220-230 K, a first kink in the temperature dependence is accompanied by a solidification of a fraction of the confined water, implying that the observed crossover is due to a change from bulk-like to interface-dominated water dynamics, rather than to a liquid-liquid phase transition. Moreover, the results provide evidence that process-like dynamics is probed above the crossover temperature, whereas …
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
