Glass Polymorphism in Hyperquenched Aqueous LiCl Solutions.

J Phys Chem B

Institute of Physical Chemistry, University of Innsbruck, Innrain 52c, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria.

Published: April 2023

We investigate the glass polymorphism of dilute LiCl-HO in the composition range of 0-5.8 mol % LiCl. The solutions are vitrified at ambient pressure (requires hyperquenching with ∼10 K s) and transformed to their high-density state using a special high-pressure annealing protocol. Ex situ characterization was performed via isobaric heating experiments using X-ray diffraction and differential scanning calorimetry. We observe signatures from a distinct high-density and a distinct low-density glass for all solutions with a mole fraction of ≤ 4.3 mol %, where the most notable are (i) the jumplike polyamorphic transition from high-density to low-density glass and (ii) two well-separated glass-to-liquid transitions and , each pertaining to one glass polymorph. These features are absent for solutions with ≥ 5.8 mol %, which show only continuous densification and relaxation behavior. That is, a switch from water-dominated to solute-dominated region occurs between 4.3 mol % LiCl and 5.8 mol % LiCl. For the water-dominated region, we find that LiCl has a huge impact only on the low-density form. This is manifested as a shift in halo peak position to denser local structures, a lowering of , and a significant change in relaxation dynamics. These effects of LiCl are observed both for hyperquenched samples and low-density samples obtained via heating of the high-density glasses, suggesting path independence. Such behavior further necessitates that LiCl is distributed homogeneously in the low-density glass. This contrasts earlier studies in which structural heterogeneity is claimed: ions were believed to be surrounded by only high-density states, thereby enforcing a phase separation into ion-rich high-density and ion-poor low-density glasses. We speculate the difference arises from the difference in cooling rates, which are higher by at least 1 order of magnitude in our case.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10123659PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.3c01030DOI Listing

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