Infrared absorption study of the hydrogen-bond symmetrization in ice to 110 GPa
- 1 December 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review B
- Vol. 54 (22), 15673-15677
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevb.54.15673
Abstract
Infrared measurements at room temperature have shown that the hydrogen-bond symmetrization occurs at 62.1 GPa in ice. The OH stretching frequency initially located at 3500 at ambient pressure falls toward zero around 60 GPa. An absorption band appears in the low-frequency region below 800 at about 65 GPa, growing a definite peak with a shift to a high frequency by further compression. Such a turn in the pressure dependence of the stretching frequency is an evidence for the transition from ice VII to symmetric ice X. The OH bending peak disappears before the transition. Two absorption peaks, which are originated from the OH stretching and librational vibrations in ice VII, persist above the transition pressure, being assigned to a translational and distortional lattice vibrations in ice X. © 1996 The American Physical Society.
Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ab initiostudies on the structural and dynamical properties of icePhysical Review B, 1993
- Ab initiostudies on high pressure phases of icePhysical Review Letters, 1992
- Effect of high pressure on the Raman spectra of ice VIII and evidence for ice XThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1986
- Disordered structure of D2O ice VII from i n s i t u neutron powder diffractionThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1985
- New High-Pressure Phase ofO: Ice XPhysical Review Letters, 1984
- Symmetric hydrogen bonds in ice XPhysics Letters A, 1984
- High pressure phase transitions and hydrogen-bond symmetry in ice polymorphsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1984
- Ice under pressure: transition to symmetrical hydrogen bondsThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1983
- On the Symmetry of the Hydrogen Bonds in Ice VIIThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1972
- Semiempirical Treatment of the Hydrogen BondThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1959