Two-structure thermodynamics for the TIP4P/2005 model of water covering supercooled and deeply stretched regions
John W. Biddle, Rakesh S. Singh, Evan M. Sparano, Francesco Ricci,, Miguel A. Gonz\'alez, Chantal Valeriani, Jos\'e L. F. Abascal, Pablo G., Debenedetti, Mikhail A. Anisimov, Fr\'ed\'eric Caupin

TL;DR
This paper develops an advanced two-structure thermodynamic model for water, accurately describing supercooled and stretched states of TIP4P/2005, including negative pressures, by explicitly incorporating the liquid-vapor spinodal.
Contribution
It introduces a TSEOS that accounts for the liquid-vapor spinodal, extending the model's applicability to negative pressures and deeply supercooled conditions for the TIP4P/2005 water model.
Findings
The model accurately reproduces simulation data for density, compressibility, and heat capacity extrema.
The liquid-vapor spinodal continues monotonically to lower pressures without causing anomalies.
The approach clarifies the role of the spinodal in water's thermodynamic behavior.
Abstract
One of the most promising frameworks for understanding the anomalies of cold and supercooled water postulates the existence of two competing, interconvertible local structures. If the non-ideality in the Gibbs energy of mixing overcomes the ideal entropy of mixing of these two structures, a liquid-liquid phase transition, terminated at a liquid-liquid critical point, is predicted. Various versions of the "two-structure equation of state" (TSEOS) based on this concept have shown remarkable agreement with both experimental data for metastable, deeply supercooled water and simulations of molecular water models. However, existing TSEOSs were not designed to describe the negative pressure region and do not account for the stability limit of the liquid state with respect to the vapor. While experimental data on supercooled water at negative pressures may shed additional light on the source of…
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