AI Article Synopsis

  • A quasi-liquid layer (QLL) forms on the surface of water ice at temperatures below the melting point, and its thickness increases as temperatures approach this point.
  • The study uses vibrational sum frequency generation (SFG) spectroscopy combined with molecular dynamics simulations to examine how the QLL behaves on hexagonal ice surfaces at varying temperatures.
  • Results show that when the temperature reaches 257 K, there's a notable weakening of the hydrogen-bonded structure, indicating a transition from a single molten layer to two molten layers on the ice surface.

Article Abstract

On the surface of water ice, a quasi-liquid layer (QLL) has been extensively reported at temperatures below its bulk melting point at 273 K. Approaching the bulk melting temperature from below, the thickness of the QLL is known to increase. To elucidate the precise temperature variation of the QLL, and its nature, we investigate the surface melting of hexagonal ice by combining noncontact, surface-specific vibrational sum frequency generation (SFG) spectroscopy and spectra calculated from molecular dynamics simulations. Using SFG, we probe the outermost water layers of distinct single crystalline ice faces at different temperatures. For the basal face, a stepwise, sudden weakening of the hydrogen-bonded structure of the outermost water layers occurs at 257 K. The spectral calculations from the molecular dynamics simulations reproduce the experimental findings; this allows us to interpret our experimental findings in terms of a stepwise change from one to two molten bilayers at the transition temperature.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5240679PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1612893114DOI Listing

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