Water Phase Diagram
Water Phase Diagram
Water Phase Diagram
Phase diagrams
Phase diagrams show the preferred physical states of matter at different temperatures and pressure. Within each phase, the material is uniform with respect to its chemical composition and physical state. At typical temperatures and pressures on Earth (marked by an 'E' below) water is a liquid, but it becomes solid (that is, ice) if its temperature is lowered below 273 K and gaseous (that is, water vapor)a if its temperature is raised above 373 K, at the same pressure. Each line (phase line)e on a phase diagram represents a phase boundary and gives the conditions when two phases may stably coexist in any relative proportions (having the same Gibbs free energy). Here, a slight change in temperature or pressure may cause the phases to abruptly change from one physical state to the other. Where three phase lines join, there is a 'triple point', when three phases stably coexist (having identical Gibbs free energies),e but may abruptly and totally change into each other given a slight change in temperature or pressure. Under the singular conditions of temperature and pressure where liquid water, gaseous water and hexagonal ice stably coexist, there is a 'triple point' where both the boiling point of water and melting point of ice are equal. Four phase lines cannot meet at a single point. A 'critical point' occurs at the end of a phase line where the properties of the two phases become indistinguishable from each other, for example when, under singular conditions of temperature and pressure, liquid water is hot enough and gaseous water is under sufficient pressure that their densities are identical. Critical points are usually found at the high temperature end of the liquid-gas phase line.
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The mean surface conditions on Earth, (also atmospheric conditions, M ars and Venus on mousing over Earth) are indicated. The complex central part of the phase diagram is expanded opposite. The critical point and the orange line in the ice-one phase space refer to the low-density (LDA) and high-density (HDA) forms of amorphous water (ice) [16]. Although generally accepted and supported by diverse experimental evidence [754a, 861], the existence of this second, if metastable, critical point is impossible to prove absolutely at the present time and is disputed by some [200, 618, 628, 754b, 1115]. The transition between LDA and HDA is due to the increased entropy and attractive van der Waals contacts in HDA compensating for the reduced strength of its hydrogen bonding.
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The high-pressure phase line between ice-ten (X) and ice-eleven (XI) [81] is still subject to experimental verification and the boundary between supercritical water and ice-seven (VII) (see [691]) is still to be firmly established. Ice VII possesses higher and lower pressure forms [1428]. A phase diagram of water at higher temperatures, up to 9000 K, has been proposed [1671]. Both the critical points are shown as red circles in the phase diagram, above. Beyond the critical point in the liquid-vapor space (towards the top right, above), water is supercritical existing as small but liquid-like hydrogen-bonded clusters dispersed within a gas-like phase [456, 894, 1962], where physical properties, such as gas-like or liquid-like behavior, vary in response to changing density and the normal distinction between gas and liquid has disappeared [1766] . The critical isochor (density 322 kg m-3) is shown as the thin dashed line extension; this may be thought of as dividing more-liquid-like and moregas-like properties [540].d The properties of supercritical waterc are very different from ambient water. For example, supercritical water is a poor solvent for electrolytes, which tend to form ion pairs. However, it is such an excellent solvent for non-polar molecules, due to its low dielectric constant and poor hydrogen bonding, that many are completely miscible. Viscosity and dielectric both decrease substantially whereas auto-ionization increases substantially. The physical properties of water close to the critical point (near-critical) are particularly strongly affected [677], Extreme density fluctuations around the critical point causes opalescent turbidity. Many properties of cold liquid water change above about 200 MPa (for example, viscosity, self-diffusion, compressibility, Raman spectra and molecular separation), which may be explained by the presence of a high density liquid phase containing interpenetrating hydrogen bonds. The chemical properties of water are also greatly changed at high temperatures and pressures due to the changes in ionization, solubility, diffusivity and reactivity due to decreasing hydrogen-bonding [1116]. [Back to Top ]
Density changes
As pressure increases, the ice phases become denser. They achieve this by initially bending bonds, forming tighter ring or helical networks, and finally including greater amounts of network inter-penetration. This is particularly evident when comparing ice-five with the metastable ices (ice-four and icetwelve) that may exist in its phase space.
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The liquid-vapor density data for the graphs above, opposite and below were obtained from the IAPWS-95 equations [540]. Other phase diagrams for water are presented elsewhere [681]. The density of supercooled (emulsified) water under pressure has recently been determined [1685 ]. The two graphs below show the variation in the density of liquid, gaseous and supercritical water with temperature and pressure. The density of liquid water increases with increasing pressure and decreases with increasing temperature.
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Seen opposite is the density of liquid and solid (that is the ices) water along the liquid-solid phase line. Note that temperature varies along this phase line (as shown dashed). Hexagonal ice is less dense than liquid water whereas the other ices found in equilibrium with water are all denser with phase changes occurring on the approach of the liquid and solid densities.
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[Back to Top
Triple points
Triple points occur where three phase lines join and the three phases may coexist at equilibrium. Thermodynamic data for the triple points of water S, Triple points MPa C H, kJ mol-1 V cm3 mol-1 J mol-1 K-1 0.000611657 0.010 gas liquid -44.9 -165 -22050 gas liquid Ih gas Ih -50.9 -186 -22048 liquid Ih -5.98 -22 1.634 gas Ih XI 0 -201.0 209.9 -21.985 liquid Ih -4.23 -16.9 2.434 liquid Ih III liquid III -3.83 -15.3 -0.839 Ih III 0.39 1.6 -3.273 212.9 -34.7 Ih II -0.75 -3.2 -3.919 Ih II III Ih III 0.17 0.7 -3.532 II III 0.92 3.8 0.387 344.3 -24.3 II III 1.27 5.1 0.261 II III V
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II III II liquid liquid II liquid VI VI VI III IV V V VIII VII XV V XII VI VI XV VIII 2,100 VI VI VII 2,216 liquid liquid VI 62,000 43,000 47,000 ~40,000
V V
1.20 -0.07
4.8 -0.2
-0.721 -0.982
350.1 -16.986 liquid III liquid V III V ~500-600 ~-6 ~620 ~-55 632.4 0.16 liquid V liquid VI V VI ~5 VII VIII VIII 81.85 VI VII VII -173 >700 ~727 ~1000
1833 537 1833 538 612a 612b 1572 [Back to Top ] 2060 MPa, 78C
VI VIII VII
VII X X
VII Superionic
Footnotes
a
Gaseous water is water vapor. In science and engineering, the word 'steam' is also used for water vapor, but usually when above the boiling point of water. As commonly used in the English language, 'steam' also may mean the white cloud of fine liquid water droplets of condensed water vapor that is produced by a boiling kettle, for example. Water is present in the atmosphere in both liquid and gaseous forms. For example, when we breathe out we expire an aerosol of fine (nm - m+ radius) water droplets plus water vapor. This aerosol has been detected by a water-cluster-detecting breath sensor
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If water behaved more typically as a low molecular weight material, its phase diagram may have looked rather like this (where 'x' marks ambient conditions on earth). [Back]
Supercritical water presents a reactive environment [1507]. Neutron diffraction has shown that tetrahedral liquid-like states are observed in supercritical water at above a threshold density, while below this threshold density gas-like water forms small, trigonal, sheet-like configurations [1508]. Under extreme conditions (e.g. 2.38 g cm-3, 3000 K), dense hot water may be extremely reactive [1564]. [Back]
d
This is outwardly similar to the loci of the CP maximum, and the thermal expansion and compressibility maxima, (the 'Widom' line [1715]). Above the line is a more 'liquid-like' material and below the line is a more 'gas-like' environment. However, the Widom lines for isobaric heat capacity, isochoric heat capacity, isothermal compressibility, isobaric thermal expansion, mass density and the molar internal energy all differ, particularly at higher pressures [1923]. A case has been put for a different line (the `Frenkel line') that separates liquid and gas-like fluids on their dynamic properties above the critical point [1961]. [Back]
e
On a phase line the Gibbs free energies of the two phases (G1, G2) must be equal and remain equal if conditions change causing movement along the phase line. Thus
But, Therefore
where L is the latent heat (enthalpy change) for the phase change. This is the Clausius-Clapeyron equation. At a triple
point, the Gibbs free energies of the three phases (G1, G2, G3) must be equal and the entropy and enthalpy (latent heat) changes for all three phase
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changes (1
2, 2
3, 1
3) at that point may be calculated, given the pressure, temperature ( (c) Martin Chaplin 12 February, 2013 (printed 26 March 2013)
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