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Fast Rotational Diffusion of Water Molecules in a 2D Hydrogen Bond Networks

T. R. Prisk, Christina Hoffmann, Alexander I Kolesnikov, Eugene Mamontov, Andrey A Podlesnyak, Xiaoping Wang, P. R. C. Kent, and L. M. Anovitz

Physical Review Letters 120 196001 (2018)

Individual water molecules or small clusters of water molecules contained within microporous minerals present an extreme case of confinement where the local structure of hydrogen bond networks are dramatically altered from bulk water. In the zinc silicate hemimorphite, the water molecules form a two-dimensional hydrogen bond network with hydroxyl groups in the crystal framework. Here, we present a combined experimental and theoretical study of the structure and dynamics of water molecules within this network. The water molecules undergo a continuous phase transition in their orientational configuration analogous to a two-dimensional Ising model. The incoherent dynamic structure factor reveals two thermally activated relaxation processes, one on a subpicosecond timescale and another on a 10–100 ps timescale, between 70 and 130 K. The slow process is an in-plane reorientation of the water molecule involving the breaking of hydrogen bonds with a framework that, despite the low temperatures involved, is analogous to rotational diffusion of water molecules in the bulk liquid. The fast process is a localized motion of the water molecule with no apparent analogs among known bulk or confined phases of water.

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Comments, questions? Contact Paul Kent.Last updated Monday 2 July 2018.