Posted on 07/27/2010 2:31:00 PM PDT by decimon
College Park, MD (July 27, 2010) -- Earth's climate is strongly influenced by the presence of particles of different shapes and origins -- in the form of dust, ice and pollutants -- that find their way into the lowest portion of the atmosphere, the troposphere. There, water adsorbed on the surface of these particles can freeze at higher temperatures than pure water droplets, triggering rain and snow.
Researchers at Spain's Centre d'Investigació en Nanociència i Nanotecnologia (CIN2) have studied the underlying mechanisms of water condensation in the troposphere and found a way to make artificial materials to control water condensation and trigger ice formation at room temperature. Described in the Journal of Chemical Physics, which is published by the American Institute of Physics, their work may lead to new additives for snowmaking, improved freezer systems, or new coatings that help grow ice for skating rinks.
"Several decades ago, scientists predicted that materials with crystal faces exhibiting a structure similar to that of hexagonal ice, the form of all natural snow and ice on Earth, would be an ideal agent to induce freezing and trigger rain," explains Dr. Albert Verdaguer. "This explanation has since proven to be insufficient."
The research team chose to study barium fluoride (BaF2), a naturally occurring mineral, also known as "Frankdicksonite," as an option. They examined water adsorption on BaF2 (111) surfaces under ambient conditions using different scanning force microscopy modes and optical microscopy to zoom in on the role atomic steps play in the structure of water films, which can affect the stabilization of water bilayers and, ultimately, condensation.
Despite having the desired hexagonal structure, BaF2 turned out to be a poor ice-nucleating material. But oddly enough, other researchers had discovered that when the mineral's surface has defects, its condensation efficiency is enhanced.
Verdaguer and his colleagues figured out why this occurs. "Under ambient conditions -- room temperature and different humidities -- we observed that water condensation is mainly induced by the formation of two-dimensional ice-like patches at surface defects," Verdaguer says. "Based on our results and previous research, we're preparing artificial materials to improve water condensation in a controllable way."
The next step? The researchers' goal now is to produce environmentally-friendly synthetic materials for efficiently inducing snow. "If water condenses in an ordered way, such as a hexagonal structure, on such surfaces at ambient conditions, the term 'room temperature ice' would be fully justified," adds Verdaguer. "The solid phase, ice, would be produced by a surface effect rather than as a consequence of temperature. In the long term, we intend to prepare smart materials, 'intelligent surfaces,' that will react to water in a predefined way."
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The article, "Two-dimensional wetting: The role of atomic steps on the nucleation of thin water films on BaF2(111) at ambient conditions" by M. Cardellach, A. Verdaguer, J. Santiso, and J. Fraxedas was published online in the Journal of Chemical Physics on June 21, 2010. See: http://link.aip.org/link/JCPSA6/v132/i23/p234708/s1
Journalists may request a free PDF of this article by contacting jbardi@aip.org
NOTE: An image is available for journalists. Please contact jbardi@aip.org
Image Caption: Atomic force microscopy image of ice-like water patches on a BaF2 (111) surface at 25°C.
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So, is room temperature ice room temperature?
On the rocks ping.
I’d post anything with a contact name like Jason Socrates Bardi.
What would I do with “room tempature” ice? Put it in my “room tempature” water?
Calling Al Gore! The scientists can now reverse global warming effects, or compound the coming ice age. Whatever, as long as it snows! :)
Now just stop right there!
Freeze your neighbor's pool.
Bump for later
Say good nite, ROCK.
No prize?
Me? I've been told I'm no prize. ;-)
I wondered how many posts it would take before someone mentioned Ice-9, LOL.
Appropriately, it was the 9th post, LOL.
;>D
Kurt Vonnegut - interesting Sci-Fi author:
Cat’s Cradle
Slaughterhouse-Five
Oh... sorry... wrong book.
And so on.
Room temperature ice...I think I dated her once, back in college.
Colonel, USAFR
I remember her, dated her sister
/ha-ha
Everyone on this thread shares the ‘Nobel’. KK?
Water is a very peculiar substance with many phases:
http://www.btinternet.com/~martin.chaplin/phase.html
and there are effects still to be explained:
http://www1.lsbu.ac.uk/water/explan.html
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