Observation of liquid-solid transition of nanoconfined water at ambient temperature
Wentian Zheng, Shichen Zhang, Jian Jiang, Yipeng He, Rainer St\"ohr, Andrej Denisenko, J\"org Wrachtrup, Xiao Cheng Zeng, Ke Bian, En-Ge Wang, Ying Jiang

TL;DR
This study uses advanced quantum sensing combined with scanning probe microscopy to observe a liquid-solid phase transition in nanoconfined water at ambient temperature, revealing structural changes at a critical confinement size.
Contribution
It introduces a novel nanoscale-NMR technique with quantum sensors to analyze the structure and phase transition of nanoconfined water under ambient conditions.
Findings
Critical confinement size of ~2 nm where water becomes ordered
Detection of a solid-like contact layer on diamond surface
Confirmation of liquid-solid transition via MD simulation and NMR spectra
Abstract
Nanoconfined water plays an indispensable role in various phenomena in biology, chemistry, and engineering. It exhibits many abnormal properties compared to bulk water, especially under strong confinement. However, the origin of those anomalies is still elusive due to the lack of structural information on hydrogen-bonding networks. Considering the inhomogeneity of the nanocavity and the tiny amount of water molecules, conventional optical spectroscopies and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) fail to realize the structure analysis of nanoconfined water. Here, we addressed this issue by combining scanning probe microscopy (SPM) with advanced quantum sensing(QS) based on an atomic-size quantum sensor like nitrogen-vacancy (NV) center in diamond, which can apply the nanoscale-NMR for characterizing both the dynamics and structure of confined water at ambient conditions. We built a…
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